|
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
I loved the Bo Jackson bat on shoulder card too, but Dave Justice was the man!
__________________
R Dixon |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
My first real favorite card was this one... I traded my brother a Nintendo After Burner game for it! He originally won it in a "chance" raffle envolope for $1 at our old local card shop!
Later on after 1996 my favorite card probably became my 1993 SP Jeter rookie that I forgot I had sitting in a box of "commons" before Jeters rookie season. Thankfully the Jeter survived decently and is now an SGC 7. I still have the Jeter and the McGwire (raw).
__________________
Er1ck.L. ---D381 seeker http://www.flickr.com/photos/30236659@N04/sets/ Last edited by yanksfan09; 02-20-2017 at 09:01 AM. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
I pulled a Stan Musial in one of the first packs I can remember buying as an eight year old in 1961. Still one of my favorite cards. It started me on my goal of collecting all of the St. Louis Cardinals cards from that year. I turned 64 on Saturday and am still collecting Cardinals cards and memorabilia. Musial 1961.jpg
|
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
David Justice, Ben McDonald, junior Felix, John olerud, and all the guys whose rookies were supposed to pay for my retirement! Justice's DecK High numbers was the Bell of the Ball in 1990.
Erick, I love the Nintendo reference, trading with your brother, and remembering the ancient local card shop. That is our childhood condensed in one post. Just missing a garbage pail kids reference. I love that the Musial card led to a lifetime of a focused collection too. Last edited by orly57; 02-20-2017 at 11:05 AM. |
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
These two for me
__________________
1971 Pirates Ticket Quest: 101 of 153 regular season stubs (66%), 14 of 14 1971 ALCS, NLCS , and World Series stubs (100%) If you have any 1971 Pirate regular season game stubs (home or away games) please let me know what have! 1971 Pirates Game used bats Collection 18/18 (100%) 1971 WS Full Tickets 5/7 need games 1 and 4 |
|
#6
|
||||
|
||||
![]() I bought this card in about 1980, when I was 10 years old or so. It came from a place called Dollars & Sense, a card store in Ridgewood, NJ. I didn't have much money as a kid, and the owner took pity on me and created a shoebox filled with T206s and 1951 and 52 Bowmans, all off-grade, just for me. He'd charge me fifty cents a Bowman, and $1 a T206. I'd go there once a week with my allowance, buy a couple of packs of new cards, and spend the rest of my $5 on cards from that shoebox. Then I'd go home and show them to my grandfather, who would tell me stories about the players. It was the stories that got me, and still do - I love this stuff, the older the better, because I love imagining what it must have been like when baseball was just taking hold in this country. Most of it was just legend - there was no TV, very little radio, so it was all imagination. If you were a kid, baseball cards were the only way you could find out what players looked like, especially if you lived in a place where there was no pro baseball. What's amazing about that is that today, since there's very little video from those times, we're in the same boat - we have to depend on legends, photos, cards, etc. to try and imagine what players looked like, what their voices sounded like, how they played. And there are so many mysteries to solve - how did the cards get issued, why were certain players included or excluded, how were they distributed, why certain cards are more rare than others. It's part poetry and part archaeology, all wrapped around the greatest game ever invented. I can't imagine any more relaxing or gratifying hobby. -Al |
|
#7
|
||||
|
||||
|
Baseball cards were a big part of my adolescent youth. I recall getting a factory sealed set of 1987 Topps cards at the age of 11, and then again a set of 1988 at 12. I'd mark up the checklist as I rummaged through the box.
Baseball was my favorite sport, and I was hooked! I'd drag my older friend (who could drive) to as many local card shows as possible and I'd buy a cheap box of junk packs (well, they weren't junk back then lol) and have fun breaking it open at home. I remember walking a few miles down to a local card shop, buying a pack of 1990 Leaf, pulling a Ken Griffey Jr, and thinking that I'd just struck gold! My favorite cards at the time were of Will Clark, Jose Canseco, Mark McGwire, Ben McDonald, Mike Mussina, Bo Jackson, Mark Grace, David Justice, Cecil Fielder, Kevin Mitchell, Gary Sheffield and many others. One day, while at work with my mom (I was maybe 13), a colleague of hers struck up a conversation with me and said she owned cards from the 30s and 40s. She brought them in the next day and my jaw dropped. I saw Goudeys and Play Balls that I vowed to some day own. Around the age of 16 or 17, I stopped collecting for a number of reasons. Fast forward more than 20 years and when my wife said that I should "get a hobby", I remembered how much fun I had as a kid, so it was a no brainer
Last edited by sterlingfox; 02-20-2017 at 11:59 AM. |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
Quote:
__________________
Successful transactions with: Double-P-Enterprises, Thromdog, DavidBvintage, Desert Ice Sports, Kurtz Kardz, Cooperstown Sportscards, BBT206 and tenorvox! |
|
#9
|
||||
|
||||
|
I met David Justice in a night club in Buckhead during the Atlanta 96 Olympics. He was just going through his divorce with Halley Berry (If he only knew the future). He and Charles Barkley were both at the club and we all talked sports for a good hour. Both guys were fun to be with. As a spin to my story was in my future was the girl that Halley Berry beat to win Miss Ohio. I ended up with the runner up.. lol. I'll take it!
__________________
Love Ty Cobb rare items and baseball currency from the 19th Century. Last edited by BeanTown; 02-20-2017 at 07:57 PM. |
|
#10
|
||||
|
||||
|
As a kid the grail for me was the 90 lead frank Thomas.
Finally got one in about 1994 and paid an arm and a leg for it. Still have it at my home office in a screw down case! Always wanted the 1991 SP Michael Jordan... never could pull one. I went through an entire wax box once and struck out ![]() Got out of collecting from 1995-2015 when I stumbled on this site by mistake.... Instantly, I've been hooked...started with pre-war, but I'm getting a GM-10 Sp Jordan from eBay this week! Spent a good $15.00 on it 😂😎 |
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
|
My brother was in having his tonsils out in 1981, I bought him 3 rak packs of topps. for the longest time we managed to hold onto a few of the original cards from those packs through assorted purges, moves etc... finally lost the last one a couple moves ago and it breaks my heart.
If you ever find a heavily worn 1981 Topps George Brett with "AP" written on the back in black crayon, I'd probably buy it from you! I do still have my original "directed" collection. In about 1982 I decided I wanted every Steve Garvey card. Then he went to the Padres, but in that short window I did acquire quite a few for a preteen on a budget.
__________________
Check out https://www.thecollectorconnection.com Always looking for consignments 717.327.8915 We sell your less expensive pre-war cards individually instead of in bulk lots to make YOU the most money possible! and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecollectorconnectionauctions |
![]() |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Hobby history: Card dealers of the 1960s: James T. Elder (+ hobby drama, 1968-69) | trdcrdkid | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 12 | 03-08-2017 05:23 PM |
| Hobby Newsflash! Re: Top 250 Cards In Hobby | MattyC | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 10 | 01-17-2014 04:08 PM |
| Two things you love about the hobby & Two things you hate | skelly | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 37 | 07-03-2012 08:00 PM |
| Don't you love it when... | t206hound | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 25 | 01-22-2012 07:43 PM |
| I love Fed Ex | paul | Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions | 27 | 09-14-2009 05:37 AM |