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#1
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According to my recollection of an informal talk with a Topps honcho back in the day, they gave up on the Archives complete-set notion because they needed to sign each player or his heirs to a new contract, and it was just too big a hassle to find them all and deal with sometimes unreasonable demands.
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My (usually) vintage baseball/football card blog: http://boblemke.blogspot.com Link to my custom cards gallery: http://tinyurl.com/customcards |
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#2
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Makes sense Bob. As I recall they missed a on a couple of the 52 reprints because of difficulty getting needed family consent of deceased players
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#3
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Quote:
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#4
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Could I be the only one that thinks the 1954 achive set was ugly? They just looked weird in glossy paper and new card stock. The "cards that never were" just looked bad.
The 1953 set doesn't suffer as bad (although those extended set cards were pretty ugly too.) The 1956 set might have looked sharp, but after that.... |
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#5
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I agree that the concept was a fish out of water.
Many of those of us who collected the originals found the down-sized glossy cards jarring. And the "extended" cards in 1953 were butt-ugly. Younger collectors, by and large, couldn't have cared less about guys like Angel Scull and Bobby Young.
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My (usually) vintage baseball/football card blog: http://boblemke.blogspot.com Link to my custom cards gallery: http://tinyurl.com/customcards |
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#6
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Which is one advantage of the Topps Heritage line - the older designs with current players that the younger fans can relate to. It's just a shame Topps couldn't have waited a year to begin the series, because then they'd be able to market them as today's players in card designs from 50 years ago (the 2012 Heritage set uses the design from the 1963 Topps).
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#7
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The other issue was the archive set also were created during the hobby boom. After 1994, sales of cards started to dry up and the archives set were not only as Bob said, a bit aggravating to get all the players involved but also were not going to sell enough copies to make the project worthwhile.
That is why Topps tried the Dodgers archives in 1995 and that ended the sets until the heritage sets began in 2001 Regards Rich Last edited by Rich Klein; 05-25-2012 at 07:28 PM. |
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#8
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"fish out of water" ? I must be swimming upstream , again, because I really love the complete reprint sets. And Topp's were by far the best. As far a players from eras before ones time-- as a set builder, I've always found the commons to be as interesting and more fun than the star cards. For the younger collector, is there more interest in a common player from the fifties, if the card is an original?
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