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#1
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I collected Ryne Sandberg cards as a kid in the late 80s/early 90s. Like many others, I left the hobby during the strike.
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#2
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Nice thread. I started collecting baseball cards in 1954 at age 9. I played little league baseball in Burbank, California and I always looked forward to going to see the Hollywood Stars at Gilmore Field. I can remember like it was yesterday riding my bike down to the neighborhood corner grocery and buying a pack of cards ( I loved the hard gum ! ) and I also would buy a dill pickel out of a jar. My favorite player in 1955 was Dale Long and I would trade cards to get his. I can fondly remember getting my shoebox out and arranging the cards into teams. I never thought of it as completing a set only adding teammates. About 1956 I started collecting travel decals and to this day I think I have one of the finest collections of pinup travel decals from the 50's.
At age 12 a beautiful pinup was just more appealing than another Spook Jacobs card .
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#3
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I started collecting at the age of 6 in 1968 and continued until a H.S. senior in 1980. I was quite passionate about it and ended up with quite a collection. There is a picture of me opening a pack of 1968 Topps and the floor around me is littered with cards (a Nolan Ryan is right next to my foot just waiting to be stepped on). Fun times indeed.
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#4
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Great thread!
I can recall buying gas at our local Sunoco station and reminding my dad not to forget the football stamps! That was 1972, I was only 6, but I remember the Sunoco Stamps and the saver album vividly. I also remember the NFL Pro Draft game by Parker Brothers that contained cards from the 1974 Topps set. (Topps provided the cards for the game, but each card has a double asterick on the copyright line). Actual card collecting came to me a few years later, probably 1976-78 is all that I collected. I had a storage box with dividers, and I sorted by teams. My return to the hobby was 1995 or so. I went back to my parents basement to fetch my childhood cards, and the only thing left was a single card in the bottom of the Pro Draft game box! I still have that card, and as beat-up as it is, I will never get rid of it. |
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#5
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Nice to see how many of us old timers that collected in the fifties that there are here, and even two or three that were bustin' packs in the forties. Let us give a kind thought to our departed friend Joe Palaez who would have collected Play Balls.
In my mind's eye I can still see myself playing with a handful of cards someone had given me in 1956, amongst them a '54 Topps Ernie Banks and a '56 Topps Del Ennis. Loved that little bear cub in the corner and the way Ennis was jumping. By 1957 I was collecting with a vengeance. Didn't have easy access to any stores but my Uncle Harry owned a cigar shop in Brooklyn and every so often he'd hand me a few packs. I must have been pretty good in the schoolyard flipping games because I had a yard-high stack of '57s. Also had a number of football, basketball and hockey cards but those sports were just diversions until baseball season started again. Collected cards until 1959 when we moved from the suburbs to New York City and then my nickels and dimes went to comics. Each month I'd patronize the green newspaper shack at West 86th and Broadway, Superman, Superboy, Action, Adventure, Batman, Flash, Green Lantern, ten cents apiece, hanging by clothes pins in a neat and colorful array. Great memories.
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#6
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I'm still a kid at heart, so does that mean I never stopped?
Actually I started in 1969, and collected just Topps Baseball thru 1979. I remember an older lady from our church at this time (she was probably in her 80's) asked if I wanted her deceased husband's cards he collected when he was a kid. I was to polite and said no, I prefer the modern players. I always wonder what she would have given me....T-cards? Goudeys? I then got back into collection in 1986 collecting Red Sox players from Topps, Fleer, & Donruss as they headed to the world series. It was also then I collected my first T-card, T206 McGraw glove at hip. I then collected various T & N cards since.
__________________
Looking for affordable T205 Hoblitzell no stats; also any T206 Drum |
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#7
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Quote:
Started collecting as a second grader in 1972. Baseball, Football, Basketball. This continued with a vengeance thru high school and college. took about 15 years off starting in early to mid 90's when the family started to grow, back in it and discovered pre-war in 2009. Similar memories to others: riding my bike to "The country store" and buying pack after pack of 76 topps baseball. Easter basket was always filled with packs of cards instead of candy. Mom always came home from grogery shopping with a few packs for me. I hated having to go clothes shopping with her, but there was always the draw of getting to go to woolworth and rummage thru their bins full of rack packs looking for the best players............ Last edited by tonyo; 05-11-2011 at 01:04 PM. |
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#8
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I got started in 1977 at the age of 8. A friend on my dad's bowling team opened a card store in the bowling alley. It was in the fall so football and Star Wars cards were my first buys. Usually I would work all day Saturday and get paid in cards. Even if he paid me in cash I would still spend it on cards. I got to open the new cases of cards and would spend countless hours sorting out the stars and local favorites. I always got cards for my birthday and Christmas. I Continued buying cards up until the early 90's when I switched to memorabilia. I still have all of my cards and still frequent my friends card shop.
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Buying Kansas CDVs, Cabinets, RPPCs and other pre 1930 memorabilia. |
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#9
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My earliest recollection was around 1967 or 68...my dad bought me some Topps baseball wax packs at a US NAVY Commissary when I lived in Japan...then when I came stateside I dabbled in the Topps 1971 BB...I got serious with the 1972-74 BB sets...I remember I thought I had the complete set in 1972 and imagine my suprise when I visited cross town to see my best friend who had moved away that summer..and he had the high numbers..
I eventually got the complete set years later.. 73 set was acquire piece by piece through wax packs, rack packs, trading with friends and finally bought one series from Larry Fristch when I couldn't find them at the nearby stores... 1974 was completely acquired card by card...upgrading at shows into the 80's..and still have them.Stopped during high school years but got back into it again in college when I saw newspaper ad about a guy opening a card shop...and I've been collecting ever since...seriously with vintage stuff since the mid 80's... |
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#10
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Quote:
Clint, That shop is still one of my favorite places ever. Rob |
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