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#1
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This thread makes me Leary of start if the 1960s Topps years. I have completed 1971-to date and am currently working on 1953. Only need 42 to finish it!
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#2
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I am a Mets collector and bought all my cards pre-ebay days, I had way more trouble finding Lou Klimchock than Choo Choo Coleman.
The '67 highs were a true nightmare, the Seaver rookie was the last card I needed, more because of of price than rarity. |
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#3
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Poor Claude Raymond #586 forgot his fly was down. A little breezy down there for the big fella.
__________________
Member of OBC (Old Baseball Cards), the longest running online collecting club www.oldbaseball.com |
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#4
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Ah, the Mahaffey and Cardinal Rookie Stars. It was very frustrating trying to pick those up for my Cardinals team set.
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#5
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Guys, Dave Hornish (ToppCatt) has a real nice blog explaining some of the sheet layouts that topps used in the 60s. I can't do it justice, but the theory is that topps produced two sheets (132 cards per sheet 12 rows of 11 cards each) for each series, and each row was printed a different number of times on the left vs. right sheet, so in order to know the true short prints, you have to look at how many times a particular card's row showed up in the grand scheme of 24 rows (across the two sheets). He has a nice breakdown for 67.....the seaver is in a row that only shows up 2 times out of 24....the most shortly printed cards are those 11....then there are several rows that show up 3 out of 24, and 4 times out of 24, etc....so there is a complicated determination beyond just short and regular printing. see his website blog at the topps archives.
Here is a link: http://toppsarchives.blogspot.com/20...lin-short.html Last edited by parkerj33; 12-19-2013 at 12:15 PM. Reason: added link |
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#6
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thanks parker!
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#7
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By the way, I did finish the 67s last year and hated spending $50 for commons ray barker and mike shannon, for example. Being they are two of the 11 cards (including seaver!) that are only printed twice across the two half sheets, they are super tough.
Looks like I will face the same challenge on those 66s eventually. |
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#8
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Quote:
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#9
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If the 2nd sheet was made up only of the accepted 11 DP cards times 12. Possible?
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