Showing posts with label Showing Off. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Showing Off. Show all posts

16 June 2014

Showing Off 2: Getting to a Second Card Show


One of the local shop owners hosts a card show a few times a year (probably quarterly, I don't know) at a hotel, with probably about 20 tables set up. I made it to the show in October, but wasn't able to make the last one for some reason. I vowed to go to this one, though, but I almost didn't make it. There was some failed communication between me and my wife regarding plans for the day, and so we wound up having a rather heated discussion about whether I would be going to the show. Of course, the argument wasn't really about the day's scheduling conflict, but in reality was more about both of us feeling a bit overworked and under-appreciated in our current roles. Once we started listening to each other and rooted out the underlying issue, we were able to work it out peacefully and I went to the card show.

I wandered around for a little while to check things out and decide whether I was even in the mood to look at cards. My first purchase was not the Randy Johnson card shown above, but I knew that if I led off with a basketball card no one would click through and read this post. My first purchase was a pack of 2013-14 Panini Crusade basketball. It was a waste of money. I didn't even bother scanning the cards from it, as thinking about the $13.00 I spent in the hopes of pulling something good just makes me feel bad. I need to put an electrode in my clothing that shocks the ever-lovin' out of me any time I think about buying basketball wax. The most notable thing about the pack was the incredible amount of powder all over the cards. The latest Panini Prizm baseball product also had this issue, with a ton of white powder coming out of packs and being stuck all over the cards. Panini says it is an organic press powder designed to make Prizm-technology cards stop double-feeding through the printing machines. I say it is a mess and I don't think I'll be buying more of their products until they find a better solution. I participated in a Prizm group break a little while ago, and those cards were also covered in powder.


After the powdery pack of cards, I continued my show tradition of paying too much for Hakeem Olajuwon cards. In this case it was a '96-'97 Topps Stadium Club Top Crop insert featuring Olajuwon and Shaquille O'Neal. It's a nice shiny card, but not really worth what I paid for it. At least the guy gave me 50% off the sticker price. One thing that really gets me was the sellers' reliance on 'book' prices, which may or may not be relevant. A couple of savvier guys were pulling up the recent sold eBay listings as justification for their prices, which I think is probably much closer to reality than whatever Beckett is printing.


Next I talked to a guy who was wearing a John Elway jersey and a Denver Broncos hat. We talked a little about the Broncos, and I asked him if he had any Shannon Sharpe cards. He didn't have any on the table, but he had a small box of them in his pile by the wall. I sorted through them and picked out 18 cards that jumped out at me. Was there a consistently better product in the late 90's than Collector's Choice? I don't think so.


I held back a little because I hadn't brought a lot of cash with me, but when I handed him the stack of cards I had chosen he told me he'd let them go for $2. Well heck, of course I'll take them for $2. I should have grabbed a lot more of them. Although Sharpe is probably my favorite Bronco of all-time, I don't have a lot of his cards. In high school I was all about the basketball cards, and I didn't accumulate much football or baseball stuff at all. This little stack of cards makes a pretty good start to a Sharpe player collection. There were one or two cool cards picturing him as a Raven, but I am not ready to cross that bridge.


Because he had made such a low offer to me for the Sharpe lot, I decided to also pick up this Tim Tebow Rookie Card from him, which is a photo variation of some kind. His career never really took off, but he had that crazy run in 2011 that was hugely exciting for me as a Bronco fan. I'll probably always have a bit of a soft spot for Tebow and his cards because of that.

After purchasing the Tebow and Sharpe cards I grabbed that Randy Johnson Upper Deck card at the top of the post from a table across the aisle. Could I have gotten it cheaper at some point in my collecting career? Probably, but now I have it and I don't have to worry about it. At least I didn't buy the graded copy I saw with a $60 price tag on it.


As I headed for the exit I had $5 left in my pocket, and I saw a guy set up with a ton of vintage stuff. He had a box showcasing low-grade vintage stars at 80-95% off book. I thought I might have a look at that. The first card that caught my eye was that one up at the top, with Goose Gossage and Rollie Fingers on the front. It's too bad Gossage hadn't grown his handlebar out yet, or that card would probably take over the world. Nolan Ryan and Tom Seaver on a card together? I'll take it. I'll even take Nolan Ryan and J.R. Richard on a card together. There was another card with them together on it, but it would have taken me over $5, so I had to put it back.


Here is another bunch of cards from that box. You can see especially in this scan that these cards were in rough shape. But I got a Killebrew In Action card and a psychadelic bat barrel shot. A PSA 10 graded copy of that psychadelic 1972 card sold for $1235 on eBay, and I got my well-loved copy for less than a dollar. A similarly-graded In Action Killebrew card went for $400 on eBay. I may never get my $0.83 back from these cards, but I have probably already got my money's worth in intangible benefits from owning the cards. I like that Rollie Fingers card in the middle, too. This year's Archives set has sparked my interest in the 1973 set design, so all you old curmudgeons who dislike Archives can at least take solace in the fact that it has driven some collectors into taking a closer look at the vintage sets you love so much. I had to put back a couple of other Fingers cards and a very miscut 1975 Harmon Killebrew card, but I imagine most of that guy's cards will be there at the next show. It would be kind of fun to put together a vintage set, even a low-grade one. I am not sure which one I would try for, though. Right now it would probably be a toss-up between 1973 and 1975. That is something I may have to look into in the near future.

After handing over my $5 bill I headed for the exit and went home. My stack of cards wasn't very big, but I feel like I did all right. There were a couple of cards I had to leave behind because I wasn't on the market for high-dollar stuff, and I really wish I had spent the $13 from that pack of basketball cards on something else, but overall I feel okay about the experience.

02 October 2013

Showing Off 1: There's a First Time for Everything

The somewhat local card shop hosts a card show every few months. I hadn't ever been to a card show, so I thought I might try it out. I got there about an hour before the doors closed, so probably about half of the dealers had already closed up shop. There were still a fair number of tables occupied, though, so there was still a decent amount of stuff to look at.

The first thing I bought was the last two packs from a box of Topps Chrome on the table of the guy running the show, so I could get change for my $20 bill. The thumbprints on the cards all came from me. Not much to say about the base cards. Here they are:


And here are the two horizontal cards from the packs. I think my favorite thing about Topps Chrome cards is the smell that they have. It's a plasticky chemical scent that probably causes cancer in the state of California. I have just confirmed that Panini Prizm cards have the same scent.


I did not pull either of the two autographs allocated per box, and I had to settle for two base Refractors as my inserts. At least they are Refractors of decent players; Joe Mauer and Yasiel Puig. I guess I ought to put the Puig on eBay. It's going for upwards of $10 right now. That just seems a little ridiculous to me. But I guess the demand is there. I've picked up a little bit of Chrome here and there so far, but I didn't think I wanted to try building the set, as you only get about 3-1/3 base cards per pack. At $2.99 per retail pack and assuming perfect collation, it would take me 67 packs to build the set, or $200.33 + tax. Boo! Sure, there is the off chance that I could hit some kind of crazy hit and be happy, but especially on the retail side the odds are against me. So I ordered a complete base set from a case buster on eBay for $25.00 and am calling it good. Now I can pick up a pack here or there without feeling driven to buy Moar! and Moar! in an attempt to finish a set. In looking at my Bowman set I finally decided to do the same thing, as I have busted a lot of that product and still was quite a bit short of a full set. I enjoy building a set just as much as anyone else, but I like to keep my sets mostly achievable, like Opening Day or the flagship set, stuff that offers 7 or 10 cards in a lower-priced pack. That is probably enough rant for now. I should just be happy that I pulled a Puig Refractor and not some scrub base card.


I think I read a blog post a while ago that warned against wearing team- or player-specific clothing to card shows because then that's all people will try to sell you, but I forgot about it until just now. I wore my Marshawn Lynch Seahawks jersey to the show, and everyone tried to sell me Russell Wilson? cards, even people who had Lynch cards visible on their tables. I had to explain to them that I am mostly a Denver Broncos fan, and I don't think any of them believed me. Next time I will have to wear something neutral.

The guy I bought the next batch of cards from really tried to push a Ronnie Hillman (one of this year's Broncos Running Backs) relic card on me, but this is the card I was interested in:


The card says something about this being a Veronica Mars card, but I don't even know what that is. This is a card signed by the actress who played Deb in Napoleon Dynamite, Tina Majorino. I don't think there were ever any Napoleon Dynamite autograph cards released, so this is about as close as it gets for fans of that movie.

I also got this Panini Prestige die-cut transparent acetate card of Marshawn Lynch from the same seller. It is a pretty good addition to the collection, although I don't know why the guy didn't lead with it, as I was wearing the jersey featured on the card. Same colors, same player, everything. I don't know.

The guy was pretty frustrated by the lack of business he'd had at the show and told me he wouldn't be coming back in December for the next one. I don't know what card shows generally look like, but there can't be a lot of collectors in this area anyway, and the guy didn't exactly have a table overflowing with stuff that would pull in piles of cash.

Many of the dealers had two tables covered with 5000-count boxes of singles, maybe some display cases for bigger hits, and a couple odds and ends like bobbleheads, magazines, or complete sets. Most of them seemed to be pretty happy with the amount of business they'd seen. This dude had probably 50 cards laid out on a small table, and I didn't see anything mind-boggling among the selection. I would imagine a show is what you make of it.


He tossed in these two Elway cards. I guess that's pretty cool. I didn't even notice them on the table until he added them to the stack. I want to know why Elway is so flippin' orange all the time. He's like a human carrot. I was watching the Denver game this last week and the camera kept zooming in on his face. It was scary. I guess this explains it.


The last table I lingered at had some player-specific boxes of basketball cards. I overpaid for six Hakeem Olajuwon cards for my long-neglected player collection. Don't get me wrong, these are all the nifty insert cards I wouldn't have been able to purchase at the card shop in my youth (I could only afford base cards because I am terrible at saving my money) and I like them, but I overpaid.


When I was a kid, Olajuwon signed a deal with Spalding to release a shoe that kids could afford. The internet way-back machine tells me the MSRP on those was $35.00. I had a pair of them and still store part of my Olajuwon collection in the box they came in, but they didn't really have any staying power. Just a few days ago he released a new shoe as part of his DR34M SHAKE fashion line. The price on it is $185.00. It is also butt-ugly. I guess even our heroes can have flaws.


I may already have this base card. I may even have a picture of it on this blog. I don't know.


 After I got the Olajuwons I felt a little bad about the price I paid for them, the show was just about to close, and my pocket was pretty much empty of cash, so I left. I think that if I go again I need to give myself time to dig through the cheap boxes and work toward my want lists rather than just running around at the last minute without a plan.

The highlights of the show were probably the Majorino autograph, the Puig Refractor, and the two Olajuwon Flair Showcase cards.