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				08-28-2018, 06:34 PM
			
			
			
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			|  | R0b3rt Ch!ld3rs 
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					Join Date: Dec 2012 
						Posts: 2,569
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					Originally Posted by G1911  I usually skip mid grade and buy low grade, because I love baseball history, the nostalgia and the images, not the sharpness of the corners.  I can get every 60's set in low grade, or just one of them in near mint.  The choice seems easy to me.  Round corners, edge wear, a crease, a pinhole, none of these are a problem.  It's the same card, with the same picture, the same stats on the back, and I get just as much fun looking them through as I do a near mint example.  My low grade 1956 Mantle that cost $40 instead of $400 brings just as much joy for a fraction of the price.  I often downgrade cards even, buying a low grade copy and selling a mid grade if I have one.  I do get disgusted looks from some dealers at card shows when I ask if they have poor-good cards, but it works for me.  It's a more relaxing hobby, in my eyes, to not care about being one of the hobby elite or worrying if there is a wrinkle that isn't visible in the scan, and just build sets for personal enjoyment. |  Man, do I love the sentiment!  I am trying very hard to get back to simply enjoying having the cards/sets just for the sake of having fun owning them.  If I can help it, I would rather not have pin holes or writing, but trying to "get over" most everything else.
		 
			
			
			
			
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