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Old 03-13-2013, 03:57 PM
steve B steve B is offline
Steve Birmingham
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: eastern Mass.
Posts: 8,152
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Leon View Post
Wow, almost makes me want to sell his card and get one of those!!@ > I guess they have provenance?
But when stepping back a second, and being devil's advocate, why couldn't this button-card be enjoyed as much, or more, than something else? (again, just for arguments sake).
I suppose it could be enjoyed as much as something else. (Like a root canal maybe?) But the basis for that enjoyment is to me something that should eventually feel a bit hollow. The knowing that whatever article of clothing it was from was destroyed. That should eventually feel wrong as the collector learns more about whatever memorabilia was cut up.
I don't buy the semi socialist "cut it up so everyone can afford a piece" attitude. There are a lot of collectibles that I'll never own simply because they cost so much. For some reason I manage to feel glad that there are people who can afford them, rather than being jealous. Ok, maybe a bit jealous, but I'm still glad there are people able and willing to assemble collections that are impressive both for the items and the expense.

I have some stuff from when I had an even smaller budget than I have now. When I bought the Willie Mays Heartland that was missing an arm and had the second one loose in the bag I was happy to have it. The same goes for my first T206 that was nearly torn in half, and the first game used bat I bought- Dwight Evans- cracked and Adirondack, but only $9! I got a T3 the same day, also in truly awful condition. What a day that was!

On another level, at least to me, it feels a bit insulting and more than a little wrong that an Italian company is cutting up this stuff then labelling it "national treasures". Funny, I don't see that sort of thing in their soccer products. And no non-sports sets with stuff like a piece of the coliseum on the card.

Steve B
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