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#1
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Quote:
I am sure there are many exceptions. This is just the science of it. Lots of factors beyond UV light alone affect faded baseball cards and any collectibles for that fact. Last edited by Wimberleycardcollector; 05-27-2021 at 01:23 PM. |
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#2
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I have made threads about the subject with pictures to help fellow collectors not buy faded cards as rare errors. I have done many many science experiments and posted the results on this forum. I have never seen magenta fade before yellow in real life experiments on baseball cards. |
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#3
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Could also just be the exposure / lighting that the pictures of the card were taken under.
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#4
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Red fades to orange on my T cards, not magenta.
Not a true variation, but the different results from sheet to sheet vary greatly in the Topps vintage years. I keep a lot of different ones like this in my sets, even though they are really dupes. Can really change the aesthetic for better or worse. Cool example Robert! |
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#5
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I have heard the red to orange fading on T206s. I also heard many of the orange Cobbs got faded on purpose. |
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#6
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. It astounds me when people pay huge premiums for orange-from-red T cards, they are just damaged and faded. It's so easy and profitable to make an Orange Cobb, I'm surprised it's not even more prevalent. I'm skeptical of most "missing color" cards that just so happen to be the color that missing color would fade too these days
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#7
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First of all I never said red fades to magenta. I said red fades faster than yellow. Look you can google it if you want to read the science I'm sure. My experience is from the 30 year printing industry knowledge I have and not with baseball cards specifically. I also didn't state it was just pertaining to baseball cards. I was responding to the general comment that yellow fades first in printed pieces when exposed to light. I am not a scientist and have not conducted my own experiments. I've read it and it's been discussed in printing industry publications. I don't care if I'm right and am not going to get into a whole big deal over it. I simply shared a bit of knowledge I have on the subject from experience. Test all the cards and write as much as you'd like about it but I have much bigger things to attend to than this topic. I'm starting to understand why a lot of people don't post and just lurk on this board. LOL.
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#8
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#9
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The red fading to orange on Cobbs is a perfect example of the yellow not fading first. Less red, more yellow equals orange.
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#10
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I'm saying that my shorter-term tests of sun-induced fading have produced red fading to orange, not magentas fading. So I'm not even really disagreeing with you, just reporting what I've found as the two colors had been brought up and I'd done some tests on t cards. If that's offensive enough a reason to lurk, okay.
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