Showing posts with label 1990 SCD Price Guide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1990 SCD Price Guide. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2015

More from Wisconsin: Trade Bait

Before the cardboard border war between Alabama and Georgia began, I had a couple of posts about some great items that my mom shipped to me from my youth.  To finish off those boxes will take a pretty long post for a good reason.  And, since I wrote this over the weekend, I don't feel bad about posting it mid-Monday morning either...

When I got back into collecting and decided to go after Robin Yount as a player collection, I started seeing his name popping up in the list of inserts from the old Krause Publications -- Baseball Cards Magazine and Sports Collectors Digest.  I remembered seeing a couple of those back in the day, but I really didn't think I had any of them.  I started scouring eBay auctions to try to find those cards and picked up one or two of them.

Last Thanksgiving, part of my day at my mom's house was working with my younger brother to go through the stacks and stacks of old magazines from the 1980s that I had kept from them.  I thought there were only a bunch of old Sports Illustrateds.  Instead, there was a foot-high stack of those old Krause magazines from between 1988 and 1991.  I know I didn't buy those -- my mom or brother must have.

Inside were all those cards.  Tons of them:

Krause reprinted reprinting a couple of 1965 Topps cards -- Pete Rose and Steve Carlton.  The card backs are emblazoned with REPRINT in about 72-point font that replaces Rose's name and the cartoon at the top of the card and replaced Fritz Ackley entirely on the Carlton.

Those were two of many random cards I found in those magazines.

I wish the Mantle insert were in better shape.  It's pretty wrinkled up.

So is this one:

This next one, though, it in pretty good shape:


Now, these were great.  I'm not sure why I kept these other than, "OMG, they have players on them!" But I did.

The 1989-1990 magazines, though...I tore those babies up.  Sorry if you wanted those.  But I have all the cards out of them, and I intend to cut most of them up and ship them out in trades to people.

Here's the one that is not getting cut up -- because it's going in my Yount collection:

It sort of reminds me of those Heritage box toppers that Topps puts in those hobby boxes.

By the way, who in the hell is Cameron Drew?

Anyway, the rest of these are getting carved up.  Nick has a few of these coming his way already, and Julie from A Cracked Bat has claimed an Alan Trammell and a Mark Grace, I think, but speak up if you see one or more that you want -- all of them other than Brewers are up for grabs.

For the Jose Canseco supercollectors...you MUST have an Ozzie...




That is an awfully nice Grissom/Walker card!



This was their "Catchers" edition.  

The Abbott is a bit scuffed up and came that way in the magazine I had.  Sorry to you Abbott collectors.



And there are a couple of loose cards too:



A note about my trimming: As you can see on the top of the Drabek card above, I am not always able to cut the cards 100% straight.  That's why I cut and leave a bunch of extra white around the black-line border.  That border is the standard card measurement of 2.5"x 3.5", so I leave it to you to trim the cards down to the standard size.

Plus, I also recall reading that when PSA grades the old Hostess cards, they look for perfect trimming that leaves the dotted line all the way around the card.  So, for everyone who is concerned with condition, that's why all these cards have the black borders around them.

So, if you want one or more of the cards above, please comment below and then E-MAIL ME YOUR ADDRESS.  Even if you are pretty sure I have your address, please e-mail it anyway.  It will make my life easier and get you your cards a little more quickly.  Also, when you e-mail your mailing address to me, you should let me know what team's 1989 Topps cards I should use as buffer for the mailing process.

One further comment -- you can tell this is the late 1980s here and that Krause Publications is Midwestern-based (Iola, Wisconsin).  Notice that the only Yankees are 3 Don Mattinglys and one Babe Ruth.  And sorry Dodger fans -- not a single Dodger in sight here.  Finally, my Lord these cards look so much better without every team name being followed by a prominent "TM".  It just looks right.

Thanks for reading, and let me know what you would like from here!

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Card Show #2: Keep Atlanta Odd

The cool and the cognescenti started converging on Austin, Texas, this past weekend for the South by Southwest Conference.  What started in the 1980s as a music festival for new and emerging bands has morphed into a massive 10-day music, technology, film, health, and education conference sponsored by Miller Lite, esurance, McDonalds, Pepsi, AT&T, Philips, Capital One, Mazda, Monster Energy Drink, and IFC.  Seriously.

Austin itself is a paradox of sorts as well. It's the liberal-leaning state capital in the middle of a buttoned-down, conservative state. Of course that is painting with a broad brush, but it is one of two major cities that touts itself in a way that urges locals and visitors to "Keep Austin Weird."  Portland is the other -- a point perhaps proven or at least caricatured by Portlandia (a show which not at all coincidentally is shown on IFC).

I don't think Atlanta could ever be a "weird" city.  It has its pockets of weirdness and slackers and hipsters and the like -- as does any city.  But, perhaps, it is an odd city for us collectors -- or at least, in my world, it's an oddball city.  I gravitate towards oddballs and weird stuff that I haven't seen before, or that others might ignore.  

Take, for instance, my trip to McDonough to the card show on the South Side of Atlanta from last weekend.  It was a little disappointing -- only one vendor with true dime boxes, and those were not very full.  But, the oddballs were great, including a "$2 each, 20 items for $20 table."  

Of course that is where I went.  Here's what I found.  All of these were $1:

1.  A Box of 24-year-old Candy

Huh?


In fact, this box held all the wrappers and a complete set of all 36 Topps Superstar Standups. I've featured the empty Robin Yount candy container here before.  Now, though, I have a nearly complete set (and it's only "nearly" complete because I've already started sending some of these out to folks in trade packages).

Here's the checklist and an example of the wrapper:



I'm keeping the Yount, but ask me if you're interested in, say, Barry Bonds
George Brett
or Roger Clemens.

Yes, 36 candy dispensers with candy older than Bryce Harper for just $1.

2.  How Much Was that Card Worth in 1990?


I relied on Krausse Publications over Beckett or anyone else when I was a kid for my card "values." Why? Because they were from Wisconsin (Iola, in fact) just like me.  I should have bought the whole stack of these old price guides and hobby magazines.  

I bought this one because, as you can see, "NEW CARD SET PREMIERES!"

The cards are still inside the magazine, too.  Here they are:


Sorry about the bad scan on Clemens.  I bought this for the Paul Molitor card.  And, I admit it -- I'm still a little bit torn as to whether I keep the magazine intact or cut out the cards. Since I need the Molitor for my player collection, I'm good either way, but I'm leaning toward cutting them up.  Who wants the rest?

Even better than the cards, though, is this TOTALLY 1990-sounding promotion:


From All 50 States!  14,000 Incoming Lines!  Touch-Tone or Rotary-Dial Phone Access!  No Busy Signals!  And, Kids..Ask Mom or Dad Before You Call!

Imagine eBay, but where you pay $1 a minute to hear the auctions....yikes...no wonder those 900 numbers went away.

3.  A Franken-Relic

Haven't the foggiest idea about this thing, except that it's from one of those repacking companies, Vintage Sports Cards, and claims to include an "Authentic Jersey" obtained from The Upper Deck Company.  Not sure why the fabric is a Brewers' pinstripe and the card is a Minnesota away jersey.  It doesn't matter.

Couldn't care less if it's real or not. For $1, I'll take that chance.  It's a nice addition to the Molitor collection.

4.  A Topps 60 Relic
This one is a TON cooler than the Molitor pinstripe.


That little wool swatch with a white thread, ostensibly from a "game-used" item, is pretty awesome to me.  Again, for $1, the price was right, especially for one of my least added-to player collections, jokester Lew Burdette.

5.  A Gem Mint Sticker Album that Clearly Appreciated


I am 100% sure that I have this 1982 Topps Sticker Album with Gary Carter on the cover at my mom's house with nearly all of the stickers in the album.  It also looks like a ten-year-old owed the sticker album (which, of course, I was).  This thirty-three year-old album definitely appreciated in value though -- up 400% in 33 years.  

Here's hoping I'm around to see it when I'm 76 so I can sell it for another 400% profit -- $4, of course.

6.  Quickly Dwindling Trade Bait


The entire 1991 Sportflics/Kellogg's Corn Flakes Baseball Greats set also cost me $1.  I've already sent out about 2/3 of this set in trade packages.  I'm keeping Warren, though.  I have only 4 left of these.  Let me know if you need some.

7.  A Serial-Numbered to 99 Hall of Famer

Normally, I pay little attention to Michael Jack Schmidt's cards.  This is mainly because I have never traded with and do not know -- despite trying -- any of the Phillies bloggers out there.  So, I ask you Phillies guys -- anyone want this?

Or, if you trade with a Phillies guy, maybe someone else wants it?

8.  Last one for now -- More 3D!
At the show I talked about yesterday, I got an unopened box of the 1985 Topps 3D cards for just $5. It felt like a steal.

Then, I get a complete set of the 1986 Topps 3D cards at this show.  For $1.  Below is the wrapper.  There are still 3 or 4 unopened packs, in fact.


Here's the checklist:


I'm keeping the Carter for my PC of him, and I have plans for a couple of the others in trade packages.  The funny thing was that I got this box home and found some cards stuck to the bottom:




It was an intact 4-card box bottom from the 1986 Topps set.  I decided to cut this one up (the scans are off center...not my cutting!) because, well, you can tell how the panel ended up stuck to the 3D card box by looking at Guidry.

Let me know, though, if you want any one or many of these.

Being the oddball in a group of oddballs is not easy.  I enjoy finding these random products from my youth -- whether I saw them back in the 1980s or not.  

Even though I'm odd, I hope my love for the odd is not one that I alone share.