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#51
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The NNOF came out of boxes and cases of hobby wax or retail/grocery wax, from the east coast. All known NNOFs came from those two sources and there is no documentation or proof of pulls from any other type of 1990 Topps product (ie cello, rack, jumbo, factory sets). It really doesn't get any more specific than that unless someone can determine whether it came from an early print run or not.
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#52
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There was discussion earlier about whether Topps farmed out printing to other print shops. We can now say with 100% certainty that the entirety of the 1990 Topps set was printed at the facility in Duryea.
------ "Only 100 cards were made, and they were all presented to President Bush,'' Topps spokesman Ken Liss said. Yet Hull said he found one in a wax pack. Liss said that was impossible, because the regular baseball cards were printed in Duryea, Pa., and the president's cards were printed in New York. Topps has demanded that Hull return the card, but he has refused. ------ http://community.seattletimes.nwsour...5&slug=1059335 |
#53
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On a side note; we discovered there were actually "200" George Bush 1990 Topps cards issued when another 100 emerged into the market a couple of years ago. They were printed a bit differently. I do think a few Bush cards snuck into packs.
Rich
__________________
Look for our show listings in the Net 54 Calendar section Last edited by Rich Klein; 11-07-2018 at 12:20 PM. |
#54
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I'm not sure that rules out other locations. If the majority of the cards were printed in Duryea, there's no reason for Liss to qualify his statement by mentioning other places. He's making a general point and brevity is usually the go-to weapon of choice.
Also, I'd be surprised if Liss was with Topps in 1990. Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#55
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LISS *Was* the PR Person for Topps in 1990. The Liss family was not replaced till late 1991 early 1992 by Bob Ibach and Timm Boyle.
Regards Rich
__________________
Look for our show listings in the Net 54 Calendar section |
#56
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The Topps Archives blog has done the best detective work figuring out who printed what for Topps. link- http://toppsarchives.blogspot.com/20...ters-link.html According to the blog, Topps had been doing some of its own printing in house starting in 1965. There were several outside printers that Topps used in the vintage era - Lord Baltimore Press in Baltimore, Zabel Bros in Philadelphia, Stecher-Traung in NY and CT, Chromographic Press and A. Hoen & Co in Baltimore. Chromographic went under in 1971. A Hoen in '81, Zabel in '82 and Stecher-Traung in '85. Lord Baltimore was done with Topps by 1960. I have one source that says Topps began outsourcing printing in 1994 and their first annual report confirms that several years later. That gives us a window from the early '80s to 1994 where Topps could have printed the entirety of its product at the facility in Duryea. Last edited by West; 01-17-2022 at 01:08 PM. |
#57
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I'm not saying that Liss was lying. I'm saying that he wasn't being directly asked how many locations did they print the 1990 issue in. He was being asked about the Bush card so inconsequential information to the point he was addressing wouldn't have been brought up by him. His point was simply that the Bush card was printed in a separate place from the 1990 issue.
For the sake of argument, let's say 85% of 1990 Topps was printed in Duryea and the remaining 15% wasn't printed in New York. There's no reason, and no reasonable expectation, for Liss to mention where that other 15% was printed in the context of the Bush conversation. Not to mention that he already proved his memory wrong with the 100 card statement. All I'm saying is that his comment serves to purpose in furthering or disspelling any theory. Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#58
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Posting scans here so folks can discuss.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1990-TOPPS-...D/372496340533 Looks like a legit card to me. |
#59
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You say "he proved his memory wrong with the 100 card statement". His memory was not wrong. Topps did not know about the other 100 cards until they surfaced later in the lawsuit. So Liss did not know. The only reason that statement was incorrect was because the 100 cards went straight to President Bush and the other 100 went out the back door of the factory or into wax packs unbeknownst to Topps. Liss can only comment on information that Topps makes available to him. All the circumstantial evidence pointed to Topps former printers going out of business in the early '80's and Topps taking their printing in house from the mid-80's to the mid-90's. We then have the mouthpiece of Topps say that the regular issue 1990 Topps cards were printed in Duryea. The statement, combined with the painstakingly gathered evidence from the last 4 decades indicate that there is a very high likelihood the NNOF was printed in Duryea. You are correct, it is not 100%. I appreciate a healthy amount of skepticism but this seems like quibbling to me. |
#60
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The 100 George Bush cards was what was officially noted in 1990 as being produced. The second hundred (sheet of 100) which surfaced were not known until they hit the market place and were produced differently than the 100 known Bush cards.
Now, Ken Liss and his family were not regarded as good PR people in 1990 BUT in this case, they accurately mentioned what Topps had told them. The Bush question is a good sideshow but not germane to the Thomas discussion at this time. Makes a better subject itself Rich
__________________
Look for our show listings in the Net 54 Calendar section |
#61
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I can't explain it any better than my previous 85% analogy. This is certainly a significant piece of circumstantial evidence but it by no means puts the issue to bed, like you suggested earlier. Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#62
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Thanks for clarifying Arthur. Let’s push forward with our efforts aimed at digging for more clues.
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#63
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Looks real to me too; maybe it got a heavy blue color pass or something so the name is partially showing up. Kind of like the 1982 Blackless"ing" cards that had some black ink on the card. If it's a real 1990 Topps card, I have no problem calling it a NNOF error. Maybe BGS or SGC will holder it.
__________________
-- PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head PSA: Regularly Get Cheated BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern SGC: Closed auto authentication business JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC Oh, what a difference a year makes. |
#64
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*double post; hate this computer*
__________________
-- PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head PSA: Regularly Get Cheated BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern SGC: Closed auto authentication business JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC Oh, what a difference a year makes. Last edited by swarmee; 11-10-2018 at 12:57 PM. |
#65
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West, is that your card? I would think it would need to be examined in-hand to really form a judgment. Tough to see the surface of a card in a scan or photo. The accuracy of the area is pretty good though.
Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#66
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Not my card. I have a partial blackless Thomas, the John Hart blackless error and the Jim Acker error so I am still looking for the Thomas and the 10 other errors.
Very true that the card would have to be examined by an expert under magnification to verify it has not been altered in any way. I'm guessing there are ways to recreate this error either by using a regular Thomas, a blank front or altering a NNOF, though the latter method would be questionable as the NNOF in what looks to be PSA 6 or 7 is already worth in excess of $1500. |
#67
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I'm sure someone could do it with carefully placed paper tape and the proper chemical. Just a matter of what the surface would look like after the procedure. I also don't know what a proper NNOF surface looks like under magnification. Did the process of leaving out the black ink also leave a different surface gloss? I imagine only someone who has examined one would know.
Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#68
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I must correct the record on this. Tonight I spoke with a former Topps employee who wishes to remain anonymous. According to him Topps did NOT have printing capabilities at Duryea in 1990. They subcontracted out to other printers and had a company representative doing quality control at the printing house. The uncut sheets were then sent to Duryea to be cut up and assembled into packs, boxes and cases before being shipped out to retailers. Additionally, despite rumors to the contrary, this person did not believe that the NNOF was a "first run" printing error. His reasoning was that there was meticulous attention to detail for the first print run and more than a few people had to sign off on the first proofs. He believes that the error occurred sometime later in the production cycle as a result of some obstruction in the printing press. I didn't get into the finer details of the theory of the error causation (obstruction in the press vs. obstruction on the negative during plate exposure) as he was not directly involved in platemaking and printing. He estimated that quality control at the printers pulled a sheet once every 1000 sheets to check for errors. This may explain how 500-1000 NNOFs slipped out into packs. He did not remember the error itself which is not unusual considering the massive amount of production occurring. 1990 was probably one of the peak years in terms of total base set production run. Also, this person was employed at Duryea and the error would have been caught at wherever printing was occurring. The conversation was illuminating and it was quite interesting to speak to someone who was on the inside back then. This person gave me permission to share this information but otherwise wishes to remain anonymous and enjoy retirement and I will respect his wishes and not share any other details regarding him or his employment. Last edited by West; 11-14-2018 at 04:52 PM. |
#69
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Does anyone know which of the 1990 baseball packaging were distributed first/last in the production run?
-wax packs -cello packs -rack packs -factory sets |
#70
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The NNOF came out of wax. Have yet to hear of anyone getting it out of cello, rack packs or factory sets. As for the order of production I have to assume it was mixed throughout but I am unsure.
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#71
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You have to love how eBay sellers are always looking for a moron.
It is technically a NNOF card. https://www.ebay.com/itm/323520872353 |
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#73
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This is all you need to know: five of the six "frequently bought together" items for that listing are 1990 Fleer Jose Uribe cards.
Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#74
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I wonder if the grading companies (assuming they determined it was authentic) steered away from it because they would have a difficult time deciding how to label it. I honestly think, if it's legitimate, they should give it it's own designation like 'faded name FNOF' just as the 1937 D 3 1/2 legged Buffalo is designated as such versus the '37 D 3 Legged Buffalo nickel (for anyone who collects coins). |
#75
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I've looked at a bunch of stuff, and I think it's real too. I also have it on good authority that fading black without fading the surrounding ink is very difficult. I actually can't figure out for sure what caused it. The others are almost certainly from a big bit of debris, probably tape obstructing the plate while it was being exposed. If it wasn't then, the next likely problem is a bit of debris in the press preventing that part of the plate from being inked. But the most common of those would be a bit of paper, which of course gets inked, transfers, and looks totally different. Maybe a bit of saran wrap type stuff? That should take ink too, but might not. Usually to repel ink the obstruction has to also hold enough water. Most stuff like that is very transient, not usually hundreds or 1000+ impressions. If it's something blocking the inking, then this could be within the first few impressions. Maybe in the first 5? I have a card that has an additional 4 uninked impressions, so it can extend that many at least. But there doesn't seem to be a shadow of the border, which I'd think should be there. I can't think there was enough damage that a strip of plate got ripped out. With the pressure required, I'd think the underlying cylinder would have been inked but printed poorly. It could be a different blue plate that for some reason had the name on it when the rest didn't. That would be pretty strange, but then, it's Topps... Fortunately, the card has clues! There's a line from what's probably a plate scratch right near the left of the name plate. If it's an on-press obstruction, there should be cards with the same line. Unless the plate got changed right after the obstruction. And Topps wasn't great with registration, if the blue plates ever had the name on them, there should be cards misregistered showing a blue shadow of the name alongside the black printed name. |
#76
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Hey Steve,
Thank a lot for the response. Always like hearing from someone with printing experience. The line (plate scratch) you are talking about - are you referring to the dark line below where the "F" in "Frank" should be? Nearly all the regular NNOFs have this scratch, if that helps at all. You mentioned the number of impressions (population) of the NNOF. One person with 35+years in the printing industry said that the error was likely caught at the printers after 10 minutes. He speculated that this would have created 700-1000. He said that if it were a small number caught, say 100, then the sheets would have been pulled and sent to the bailer. What is consistent with this count is the former Topps employee told me that QC pulled uncut sheets every 1000 or so to check for mistakes and print quality. |
#77
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It would be a very cool card to look at under a microscope and see what is going on with it. |
#78
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Just because we can't imagine how, doesn't mean the how doesn't exist. Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#79
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This card could be many different things but it is not a real 1990 Topps Frank Thomas card that was altered by just removing some black ink. PSA has put many altered/counterfeit cards in slabs. Getting something by them is really not that hard. They are better than nothing but far from perfect. EDIT: To ask, Arthur who are those people you watched reback cards? Last edited by bnorth; 11-22-2018 at 07:29 AM. |
#80
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If anyone can pull off something like that then please post some pictures. |
#81
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All of those cards were cracked out of PSA slabs. Arthur
__________________
"A lot of those guys don't seem to be having as much fun as they should be." Successful transactions with Burger King, Amazon, Great Cuts, Tacos Villa Corona, TJ Maxx |
#82
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#83
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That sounds entirely plausible. We probably didn't pull sheets for QC as often as that, but we also weren't doing the sort of production Topps was - especially in 1990. Especially when I was on the press, although I did get almost up to speed with the regular guys. What's especially good to know is that Topps was still using sheet fed presses, rather than web fed. (If the web press had a cutting station they still could pull sheets, so it's not 100% ) I'd be a bit surprised if Topps sent anything to the Baler in 1990. 87 through 91 there's so much out there for misprints. One Ebay dealer had a 5000 ct box of blank front/back cards, all from the same year. |
#84
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Ben is the guy I asked about fading black. I already knew black was often impossible to fade, since it's usually a carbon pigment. I thought some of the modern dye inks might be different and Ben has tested a few different years and colors. Rebacking is pretty easy, not easy to do well, but not hard. Removing certain specific colors from an older card shouldn't be a problem on some sets, more difficult on others. T206 is probably pretty easy to take the caption off, Crackerjacks are probably very hard to change except for fading the red. On a modern card like 90 Topps, you'd have to do that through the glosscoat, or remove the gloss and regloss the whole thing after. Maybe not impossible, but not simple. |
#85
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Any conclusive update on this card with the faded/added name?
__________________
EBAY STORE: ROOKIE-PARADE |
#86
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The only thing we know definitely is no one in their right mind will pay anything close to $10K for that.
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#87
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#88
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Is the NNOF semi transparentlike a tiffany????
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#89
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I've seen some people call it a "blacklessing" version similar to the partially black 1982 Topps cards.
__________________
-- PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head PSA: Regularly Get Cheated BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern SGC: Closed auto authentication business JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC Oh, what a difference a year makes. |
#90
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1990 Topps Frank Thomas NNOF
There are many theories as to how these cards were made including the information on the PSA website. That one makes a lot of sense but it is only a very good theory. I know these come from wax packs at least, I don't know about anything else. I don't remember the year but I saw a NNOF pulled out of a pack at at the National, I think it was in Cleveland. Since this is the same year as the George Bush cards, I wonder if there is more to the story, anyway, great card.
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#91
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I found 9 of these cards in a shoe box this weekend. Is it worth the money to get these graded. PSA said it would be about $75 per card. Is that normal for these? Thanks for the advise.
I pulled these card from rack packs back in 1990. My friend got the NNOF Thomas and I got these. I remember the day vividly as I was pissed that my packs had a bunch of "printing errors" on them. They went into the shoe box 30 years ago and were just uncovered this Sunday making room in a closet. Last edited by HalfNipponese; 07-14-2020 at 01:44 PM. |
#92
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I struck gold again. Just found the Fred McGriff card. I’m up to a nice even 10.
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#93
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Although, a google search led to this article concerning the card including a price from the Jan. 1994 issue. Maybe that was the first time Beckett priced it..? https://junkwaxgems.wordpress.com/ta...k-thomas-nnof/ |
#94
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#95
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Last edited by Hatorade; 07-22-2020 at 08:40 AM. |
#96
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#97
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#98
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Happy to discuss this card
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As for those questioning the price....well I have sold and bought a few NNOF...never seen anything like this so why wouldn't it be worth more? I could be way off....or this card could be worth $100K easily if it got slabbed as a NNOF or even a partial blackless....and hit the right buyer/auction. And just as an FYI...I have had multiple offers...one as high as $3500...those educated about fakes understand this is an authentic unaltered card. |
#99
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#100
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Last edited by bnorth; 08-03-2020 at 08:19 PM. |
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