Showing posts with label ASG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ASG. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2025

My First Card Show In Over 30 Years!

The hobby environment in my little corner of the world has started to grow! Earlier this year, a new card shop opened up about 2 miles from my house. I've only had a chance to visit it once (Very nice space, but more high end than a little old collector like me would spend significant time/money in.) Anyway, through their Facebook posts I learned of a larger local group dedicated to the hobby, and earlier this summer, there was an announcement I never thought I'd see. A card show was coming to my area! 
 
Of course I had to attend! 
 
As the day approached, I felt the excitement build. I have not gone to an honest to goodness card show since high school. I didn't know what to expect, other than there was expected to be about 40 tables. How much of it was going to be high end graded stuff I'd never spend money on? How much would be Pokemon and other non-baseball collectables? Would there be dime or quarter boxes? I really had no idea.  
 
Finally, the day came, a beautiful Saturday morning. I made the drive up to what the locals call "The Expo" and was greeted with a rather amusing sign: 
 
Now that's a party!
 
There was also a flea market going on, and time did not permit me to embrace my inner Fuji and see what wonders awaited. Perhaps next time. Besides, I was a man on a mission! The card show was in one of the smaller buildings, and by the time I got there things were already going full blast and very well attended. I walked in and stopped at the welcome table by the door. I entered the free raffle (didn't win) and spent a little time chatting with the event's organizer, thanking him for putting this all together. He said he's hoping to be able to do these show every few months - fingers crossed!
 
As I said there were about 40 tables all about, and my strategy was to do a simple walk-through lap first and get a lay of who had what and who was worthy of my time and money. There were some legitimate card shops present, some coming down from a few hours away, but also there were a good number of collectors who were just selling off parts of their collection. About half of what I saw were graded cards, and there were a handful of tables dedicated to collectable card gaming. All in all, there were maybe about 6-8 tables that fit my particular goals for the day. 
 
I eventually made 4 purchases...
 

Purchase #1

 
One of the larger tables was of course in the back. The guy brought a good mix of stuff, both low end and high-end. In the far right corner of his table he had a box of cards 4/$1. I did a quick look through the Red Sox cards and found a short print I had to snatch up before someone else did! I picked out another 3 cards, and decided to come back and really dig through what he had before I left. 
 

That Williams is one of my favorite pickups for the day. Did you know he was such a prolific fly fisherman that he's in the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame as well? I'm also glad to grab a couple of the current team's young players, as well a new Pedro (even though I'm not fond of that yellowish background..)
 

Purchase #2

 
In my initial pass-through, I noticed another smaller table where there were cards on the cheap, but I had to wait until there was less of a crowd before I could check it out. I'm glad I did, because he was selling a card 8/$1! This guy was just selling from his collection, trying to get rid of some things he didn't need/want. He also had a box of cards that were free for any of the kids to take, which earned him Diamond Jesters street cred.
 

I actually got a couple cards free, as I had initially miscounted and handed him 17 cards instead of 16, and also one of the cards had another card tucked in behind it in the penny sleeve. The guy was very nice, laid back and the vendor I enjoyed conversing with the most.
 

Purchase #3

 
The smallest table there was another guy who was basically selling from his collection. What made him stand out was that he had a spinner where you can pay $1 and get whatever it landed on (pack of cards, card from his $1 box, card from his $3 box, etc...) The cheapest thing he had was $1 anyway, so why not take a chance and spin? I earned my money back by winning a card of my choice from his $1 box.
 

Truth be told, he didn't have much in that box that would fit my collection - mostly football and basketball. There was among the few baseball this Laughlin World Series card. Even though I already own it, it was pretty much the clear choice! 
 

Purchase #4

 
After checking around all the other tables without any real temptation, I decided to end my day by going back to the first dealer. I spent a lot more time at his tables and the various boxes of cards he had available. One of those boxes was full of vintage stars, and I found a couple of rookie cards that were well within my price range: 
 

Subconsciously, I think I was ashamed for myself to have a limited number of Dick Allen cards, (most of which used the same sideways portrait at that!) Picking up a well loved copy of his rookie card made me feel better!
 
 
Speaking of well-loved, I found these two great cards in his box of $1 cards. I'm super excited to add a vintage All-Star card of the great Yaz. Tony C was a fun find too!
 

I of course had to go back to the quarter box! This time I searched through teams other than the Red Sox for some cards that piqued my interest. Not pictured are some cards I found with the intent of sending off to another blogger as a long overdue thank you. The Santa Clause seemed like something I should have on hand for a future holiday post, while 2005 Upper Deck Classics is a set I enjoy and will pick up an odd card now and again. The Ted Williams should be self explanatory by now.
 

It seemed wrong to go to a card show and not get a pack to rip, so I topped off my purchase with a trio of 1990 Upper Deck. Did I pull a Reggie Jackson auto? I'll save the contents of these for another post. After spending singles here and there all morning, this purchase set me back a very reasonable $20. Low budget collecting for the win!
 
All in all, this card show was a lot of fun! A few thoughts...
  • Growing up, one of my favorite things about going to a card show was buying a box, then going home, ripping 30+ packs of cards and coming away with at least 90% of the set. You can't do that anymore. Boxes are too expensive for kids, and fewer people care about building sets - including the manufacturers who would rather cram 10,000 inserts and parallels down our collective throats.  
  • Going back to the lost art of set building, it just isn't worth it for vendors to haul boxes of minor players for people to finish their sets. That saddens me.
  • From the "We are not the same" department: while I was joyfully picking though quarter boxes, there was a guy next to me trying to sell a card to the vendor for $800. The vendor politely declined, and the gent took his little gangster case of cards elsewhere. I get how the thrill of pulling a card worth hundreds of dollars excites a lot of people in this hobby, but I seen more than my fair share of Wally Joyner and Gregg Jefferies rookie cards. I've know how the speculation game often ends.
  • Everyone there, vendors and collectors alike, were all very much polite and well behaved. It wasn't the largest building on the grounds, but it never felt crowded. I never had to wait more than a few minutes for my turn at any table. Made for a much more pleasurable experience.
  • I'm convinced more than ever that professional grading has ensured that some of the classic cards I missed out in my childhood will probably be forever out of my price range. I saw both the Upper Deck Griffey rookie and  Billy Ripken F-Face card there, and the price for graded copies seemed insane to me. 

Although it won't be good for my wallet, I'm looking forward to seeing how the hobby as a whole continues to grow down here in central VA. Here's hoping some more card shows are in my future!

 ***Update!***

 

 
Looks like there will be another card show in my future! 

Monday, February 21, 2022

Time Travel Trading Update #62

 
I was hoping to squeeze in a pack of this year's new base set, but my local Wally World didn't have any in stock when I checked, so that will unfortunately have to wait until next month's update.

Last time, I mentioned how I wanted to start whittling down some of the cards in the stack to keep it from getting too out of hand. My targets are the cards that have been sitting in the stack for the longest. I started this project in 2018, and there are still a lot of cards I received that year that have been sitting around unclaimed. Going through my records, I found the most tenured card was a 1986 Topps Fernando Valenzuela Turn Back The Clock. I hopped onto the TCDB, and was able to find someone with this card on his want list! I managed to propose a trade with Cody, and sent a handful of cards from the stack in exchange for these:

Now, since I'm trying to keep the amount of cards manageable, I sent him more cards than I received. However, I feel I got some bigger names added - a quality over quantity trade as it were.
 
Our next trade comes from Bo (Baseball Cards Come To Life!) Bo picked up a few cards, including some colorfully-named former Red Sox and returned fire with a nice quartet:

Jeff (Wax Pack Wonders) has been making monthly trades and shooting up the leaderboard among my most frequent trade partners. This time he's offered up a nice mix of baseball and football cards:


Brendan (The View From The Third Floor) always sends great cards, and this time was no exception! Every so often, I notice certain players show up in the return packages multiple times. The great Joe Montana makes his second appearance in this update:

Long time blog reader Derek contacted me on the TCDB and made his first of hopefully many Time Travel Trades. I sent a bunch of cards to Canada, and if you're going to trade with a Canadian, the two things you hope to see are hockey and O-Pee-Chee! Derek doesn't disappoint and sent such a fantastic variety of cards:


Just for clarity sake, the Humpty Dumpty Troy Murray and Frito-Lay Cam Neely are still in their cellophane wrappers.

Other than one last return I'm waiting on, that's all for now! I'll have a bonus post later this week to help clear out some more of theses long-forgotten cards. I'm hoping my highlighting them one last time I can generate some interest! Stayed tuned!
 
As always, these cards are all available in exchange for an older card! You can claim your cards below, or through the TCDB (Kep75). Let's make some trades!

The Time Travel Trade Stack:

2019 Topps
#313 Robinson Cano

2019 Topps Opening Day

#93 J.D. Martinez
#197 Felipe Vazquez  
 
2017-1018 Pocket Schedule
Carolina Hurricanes

2017 Bowman
#12 Trea Turner
 
2015-16 Upper Deck (hockey)
#185 Alex Ovechkin
 
2013 Panini USA Champions
#56 Randal Grichuck
  
2010 Bowman - Prospects Black
#BP51 Chase D'Arnaud
#BP56 Rolando Gomez

2010 Bowman Chrome
#13 Brian Roberts

2010 Bowman Chrome - Prospects
#BCP178 Nathan Adcock
#BCP186 Jhan Marinez
 
2010 Bowman Platinum - Prospects
#PP38 Brian Johnson  
 
2010 Topps - Draft 75th Anniversary (football)
#75DA-1 Joe Montana

2010 Topps - Gold (football)
#157 Earl Thomas (RC, SN2010)
 
2009 Bowman - Chrome WBC Prospects
#BCW18 Tao Bu   
 
2008 SPx - Rookie Signatures Gold
#141 Bill White (AU)
 
2004 Topps
#203 Bo Hart (ASR)

2004 Topps All-Time Fan Favorites
#52 Clete Boyer

2002 Fleer Greats Of The Game
#64 Frank Howard
 
2001 Fleer Greats Of The Game
#77 Lester Lockett 
 
2000-01 Be A Player Signature Series - Autographs (hockey)
#88 Lyle Odelein (AU)
 
1998 Team Best
#15 Troy Glaus  
 
1997-98 Zebra Pen New Jersey Devils (hockey)
#NNO Lyle Odelein
 
1996 Fleer Update
#U238 Tim Salmon (ENC) 
 
1995 Topps
#215 Mike Greenwell 
 
1994 Stadium Club
#448 Erik Pappas 

1993 Leaf
#271 Jay Buhner
 
1993 Ted Williams
#101 Marlin Carter (NLB)  

1993 Playoff - Playoff Club
#PC-1 Joe Montana

1993 Classic Draft Picks (basketball)
#33 Will Flemons
#67 Bennie Seltzer
 
1992-93 Humpty Dumpty I (hockey)
#NNO Troy Murray
 
1992 Nabisco
#33 Steve Rogers 
 
1992 Score - 90's Impact Players
#65 Ron Gant
 
1992 Triple Play - Gallery Of Stars
#GS-1 Bobby Bonilla  
 
1991-92 Upper Deck McDonald's All-Stars - Holograms (hockey)
#McH-02 Chris Chelios
 
1991 Stadium Club
 
1991 Topps Desert Storm (non-sport)
#147 Working Together 
  
1990 Donruss
#437 Dan Quisenberry (UER, VAR: Pack border, no dot after INC)

1990 Fleer
#125 Jim Abbott
 
1990 Score
#3 Dwight Evans
 
1990 Upper Deck
#626 Frank Viola

1990 Pro Set - Theme Art (football)
#10 Super Bowl X Pittsburgh Steelers / Dallas Cowboys
 
1989 San Diego Padres
#19 Garry Templeton
 
1989 Score
#495 Larry Parrish
 
1989 Sportflics
#157 Harold Baines  
 
1988-89 Frito-Lay Stickers (hockey)
#NNO Cam Neely

1988-89 ProCards Sherbrooke Canadiens AHL (hockey)
#NNO Mario Roberge
 
 
 
1986 Sportflics
#30 Jose Cruz 
 
1986 Topps - Glossy All-Stars
 
 
 
1985 Topps
#7 Nolan Ryan (RB)
 
1985 Topps - Glossy All-Stars
#18 Chet Lemon
#22 Hank Greenberg (CAPT) 

1985 Topps (football)
#281 Raiders Team Leaders (TL)
 
1984 Donruss

1984 Fleer
 
1984 Fleer - Team Stickers
#NNO Minnesota Twins Cap  
 
1983 Stuart Bakery Montreal Expos
#18 Warren Cromartie
 
1983 Topps (football)

1982 Donruss
#239 Dwayne Murphy
 
1982 O-Pee-Chee E.T. The Extraterrestrial (non-sport)
#15 Among Elliott's Toys

1982 Topps
 
1982 Topps Kmart 20th Anniversary
#43 Hank Aaron (HL) 
 
1982 Topps (football) 

1981 Donruss  
#215 Jerry Remy
 
1981 Topps (football)
#18 Frank Lewis 
 
 
1980 Topps (football)
#132 Eagles Team Leaders (CL, TL)
 
1979-80 O-Pee-Chee (hockey)
#3 1978-79 Scoring Leaders (Bryan Trottier/Marcel Dionne/Guy Lafleur) (LL, UER)
#93 Glen Sharpley
#145 Carol Vadnais
#238 Terry O'Reilly
#670 Jim Hunter
#118 Kevin Porter 
#129 Ray Williams (RC)
 
1978-79 O-Pee-Chee (hockey)
#13 Doug Jarvis
#42 Gary McAdam
#193 Boston Bruins (CL, TC)
#205 St. Louis Blues (CL, TC) 

1978 Topps  
 
1978 Topps (football)
#521 Eagles Team Leaders (CL, TL) 
 
1977-78 Topps - White Backs (basketball)
#78 Richard Washington (RC)
 
1977 Topps
#362 Tommy Davis 
#535 Cesar Geronimo
 
1977 Topps (football)
#350 Bill Bergey (AP)
 
1976 Funky Sales Corp Funky Facts Baseball
#2 In A Trance
#3 Fans Vs Players
#5 Baseballeese
 
1976 SSPC
#7 Elias Sosa 

1976 Topps
 
1976 Topps - Traded
#380T Bobby Bonds

1975 Topps
#41 Cesar Geronimo
 
 
1974 Topps - Team Checklists (2 Stars)
#NNO Los Angeles Dodgers
#NNO Pittsburg Pirates 

1974 Topps - Traded
#43T Jim Wynn
 
 
1973 Topps
#4 John Milner
#102 Rudy May  
 
1972 Topps  
#33 Billy Martin (MGR)
#491 Jim Hardin 

1970 Brooke Bond North American Wildlife In Danger (non-sport)
#32 Polar Bear

1970 Topps
#3 Darrell Chaney
#125 Deron Johnson
#206 Clete Boyer
#287 Fred Talbot   #390 Willie Davis  
 
1969 Globe Imports Playing Cards Gas Station Issue
#6Spades Tommy John 

1969 Topps
#66 Orioles Rookies
 
1968 Topps

1966 Topps
#46 Howie Koplitz
 

1962 Topps

1961 Topps
 
1960 Topps
 
1960 Topps (football)
#28 Jim Ray Smith 

1959 Topps
#245 Ned Garver (VAR; grey/darker back)
#251 Cletis Boyer (VAR: grey/darker back)
 
1956 Topps (football)
#42 Tom Fears
#51 Ted Marchibroda
 
1956 Topps Flags of the World (non-sport)
#70 Jordan
 
1955 Topps
#45 Hank Sauer
 
1955 Bowman (football)
#9 Don Stonesifer
#29 Bucko Kilroy

1955 Topps All-American (football)
#46 Arnie Lassman
 
1954 Topps
#238 Al Aber

1954 Bowman
#73 Don Mueller

1954 Bowman Power For Peace (non-sport)
#91 USS Coral Sea (CVB43)

1953 Topps

1938 Church & Dwight Useful Birds Of America Tenth Series (J9-6) (non-sport)
#2 Black-throated Green Warbler

1937-38  Diamond Matchbooks Tan 6 (hockey)
#NNO Glenn Brydson
 
1935 Church & Dwight Useful Birds of America Eighth Series (J9-4) (non-sport)
#10 California Jay

1933 Church & Dwight Useful Birds of America Fifth Series (J9-1) (non-sport)
#5 Indigo Bunting 

1922 Church & Dwight Useful Birds Of America Third Series (J7) (non-sport)
#7 Prothonotary Warbler

1915 Church & Dwight Useful Birds Of America First Series (J5) (non-sport)
#1 Quail
 
1890 N245 Sweet Caporal Actors & Actresses (non-sport)
#NNO Frankie Raymond

The Time Travel Trading Project is simple in concept. I started out with a random pack of 2018 Topps Series 1 baseball cards. My aim was to trade every card in that pack for something older. Each card I receive in turn is then made available for trade, with the goal to get the oldest card I can get.

Number of trades completed: 144 (1 pending)
Unique trading partners: 57

Number of cards mailed out: 576
Year of oldest card mailed out: 1910-11

Number of cards received: 897
Year of oldest card received: 1890