Tuesday, May 7, 2024

The natural pairing of 1992 Upper Deck Denny's holograms and early 1950s Bowman

I got two trade packages on the same day that, purely by coincidence, had a very similar, rather odd pairing. One was a blog trade and one was TCDB, so I knew what was coming, but didn't realize I had put together two very similar trades until they arrived at the same time.

One of these was my monthly Time Travel Trade with Diamond Jesters. I sent Matt a trio of old non-sport cards with three very different subjects that will hopefully resonate with a trade somewhere, so I could pick up some of the older baseball cards that had been sitting there for a while. Here we have Bowman cards from 1948 and 1951, and a Topps card from 1953.

I also picked up two modern cards that were newly available. 1992 Denny's is a great set - the cool shiny holograms combined with the city skylines are a double win for me. Even better is Ruben Sierra, who was one of my all-time favorite Yankees.
These arrived at the same time as a TCDB trade with triplecrown. Two more Denny's holograms. Polonia and O'Neill were two more favorites of mine from two very different eras of Yankee baseball. And with them, naturally, two 1950 Bowmans!
He has a lot of fun Tigers oddballs available, and here are the rest of the cards from the trade. Pepsi, Coke, Domino's, Hostess. Some great photos on Sparky and Northrup's cards.


Monday, May 6, 2024

Like the old days

Friday was a rare day in the office for me, and while I was in the city I was able to take advantage of a rare great Craigslist deal on baseball cards. A decade or so ago, it seems like these kind of deals came up every few months, but they were drying up by the late 2010s thanks to Facebook Marketplace, where everything seems to be more expensive. This is my first time buying cards this way since before COVID.

The deal was $15 for two 1,600-count boxes of cards. All I knew was that they were late 1990s, so I knew that I would likely need a lot of the cards. Here is the seller's photo, since I took out the cards to organize them before I thought to take my own picture.

The cards were almost all late 1990s. A few were earlier, and there was a fair amount of 2023 cards as well. My guess is that someone most likely collected from 1995-1999, stopped, picked it up for a short time in 2023 and lost interest. One box was pretty much all rookie cards, while the other was mostly stars as well as commons. They had likely been weeded out a little bit before I got to them - there were lots of cards of players like Bonds, Gwynn, and Maddux, but no A-Rod, Jeter or Rivera, for example. 

I am still sorting but it's been a lot of fun going through so many cards knowing that I will need many and the rest will be pretty good trade bait. There was a wide variety of brands, and even a fair amount of inserts and parallels.

I did take some pictures of the cards as I was going through them, semi-randomly as a I came across cards that seemed particularly interesting.

An example of some of the randomness - shiny insert, interesting photos, parallels, etc. 

Some shiny Bowman, plus some 1996 Bowman. I very rarely see cards from that set, and there were probably over 100 in the boxes.
I like the shiny foil heads in this set.
Lots of these international map parallels which are a nice concept but not necessarily executed well if you look at the maps closely. They have the Bronx in Brooklyn, for example.
Just a little smattering of older cards. I had all of these already.
Some more shiny randomness. There were hundreds of the 1999 SP Top Prospects set, which I've already completed. All those shiny golden cards do look good in a big stack. And then randomly three Select cards from 2022.
This was a batch of Yankee veterans and stars all grouped together.
Some more shiny eye-catching cards. That UD insert card in the top left is translucent.
No wonder the boxes were so heavy to lug around! These helmet card are massive. The look and texture are cool, though.
Some examples of cards from the star box. There would be three to five in a row from various stars, ranging from all-time greats like Rose and Piazza to stars who shined more briefly like Chavez and Williams.
A lot of Darin Erstad cards together caught my eye. I didn't notice until after I took the photo that one was Tim Salmon.
Some more of the bigger stars.
More eye-catchers, from a shiny insert to a great photo from the Yankees' last World Series win.
There was just a small handful of basketball among the baseball, all from the same UD set, with the back photos generally more interesting than the front. These are all available for trade.
Nice random Gerrit Cole grouping! He's probably quite a bit away from coming back, unfortunately.
Lots of fun shiny cards here.
Another random grouping, but I'm most interested in Gil Meche's card. What is he standing in front of? It looks to me like a giant telescope.
Four random but very cool Sports Illustrated cards.
I'm still going through all the cards but will have a lot to trade. If anyone has any late-90s sets, teams, or players they'd like me to look out for, let me know!



Sunday, May 5, 2024

Wallet Card with a MasterCharge sign (and others)

I was in Park Slope, Brooklyn on Friday afternoon and had some time to get in a few wallet card photos in.

This handpainted sign on a locksmith business notes that they take Visa and MasterCharge. This presumably predates MasterCharge changing their name to MasterCard in 1979.

The other two photos are both laundry related. I couldn't find much online about Anchor Laundry, for whom a faded ad is still visible above a restaurant. Seems they were pretty big in the 1920s, but I couldn't find a more recent reference.
Nearby was another cool laundry-related old sign. This style of "Wash & Dry" laundromat style was very popular in the 1950s. As a kid in the 1980s I remember one near me, perhaps you had one like that in your town. They are quite rare now. I like the awning too, advertising a "coin-op launderette".
I walked around for about half an hour taking these photos, all while carrying two large boxes of baseball cards. More on that next post!


Saturday, May 4, 2024

(Lee Maye)(the fourth be with)(Yu Darvish)

I've had the idea for this post for almost a year. Last year I was watching a Yankees-Blue Jays game. My wife walked by and thought she heard the announcer say that Boba Fett was batting for the Blue Jays. That gave me the idea for matching up Star Wars characters with baseball players. I was able to think of some more player names that are similar to Star Wars character names. Some of these are closer matches than others. I just limited it to Star Wars characters that I have a card for, which is mostly just my old Return of the Jedi cards from when I was a kid. I'm sure there's a lot more from the newer movies and TV shows but I had to stop somewhere!

"I'm Luke Walker, I'm here to rescue you!"
"Consolo, captain of the Millennium Falcon . . ."
"I'm Lando Cepeda, administrator of this facility. And who might you be?"
"Governor Larkin. I thought I recognized your foul stench when I came on board."
"There you will learn from Koda, the Jedi Master who instructed me."
LoGray, the Ewok medicine man.
Droopy McCool was a member of Jabba the Hutt's palace band. Apparently his real name was Snit.
"This is my counterpart, Artoo-Ditmar."

"Obi-Wan Kozlowski? I wonder if he means old Ben Kozlowski?"

"We'll find Joba the Hutt and that bounty hunter . . . "
Qui-John Finn, who trained Obi-Wan Kenobi, played minor league baseball, and writes a baseball card blog.
Qui-John Finn was defeated by the dark lord Darth Maule.

Happy Star Wars Day!


Friday, May 3, 2024

New York Times Mid-Week Pictorial, January 14, 1933 (plus a bonus)

This was a magazine that I assume came inside the New York Times. This was preserved quite nicely in plastic, so it's in very good shape for a 90-year-old magazine. As you can see, this was the Calvin Coolidge Memorial Number, and the first half of the magazine was devoted to the former President who had died a few days earlier.

There were lots of photos of Silent Cal from his childhood to 1932. Not a whole lot of interest unless you are a big Coolidge fan.
The rest of the magazine was devoted to photos related to arts, entertainment and the news. You'd never know there was a Depression going on with some of these fashions.
Plays and movies in the theater listings, with some big names like Fred Astaire and William Powell.
Some interesting news oddities, like a gas station built around an old airplane, evidence of a prehistoric comet collision, artificial snow, and a butt log.
Sports! No baseball in January, but a full page of Rose Bowl coverage. USC shut out Pittsburgh, 35-0. The bottom left has a photo of USC quarterback Cotton Warburton. A unanimous All-American, Warburton turned down an offer from the Chicago Bears and instead took a job in film editing. He had an outstanding career as a film editor, and was the lead editor for most of Walt Disney's live action films in the 1950s and 1960s. He won an Academy Award in 1964 for Mary Poppins.

I mentioned a bonus. Tucked inside the magazine was this page from the Boston Herald of November 6, 1932. This was two days before election day, and one side featured President and Mrs. Hoover.

Meanwhile, the other side had some football highlights! Dartmouth lost to Harvard 10-7, failing to execute a last-second fake kick, as diagrammed in the photo below.



Thursday, May 2, 2024

Equipment: 1989 Topps (Traded and Big)

Jerry Browne's nickname "Gov" can be seen on his batting glove. I remember it can also be seen on his 1991 Donruss card. I am thinking that I am going to cut off this series at 1990, though. The end of the Eighties seems like a good stopping point, leaving a reasonable amount of cards from other brands like Donruss and Fleer to go through. Maybe an exception for a set like Collectors Choice or some minor league sets.

Steve Sax wore #6 for the Yankees, but his bat knob says 11, which belonged to Don Slaught.
Tommy Barrett wore #14 in 1988 and #29 in 1989. I found a 1989 Phillies spring training program online at Barrett did wear #14 in spring of 1989. However, in the inset photo he is wearing the batting helmet of #18, Chris James.