Desert_Power
Footballguy
Wouldn't be surprising at all if these allegations were true about backyard: https://twitter.com/ericwhiteback/status/1580921626216255490
I wouldn’t be surprised either. They are REALLY annoying, but they get the clicks.Wouldn't be surprising at all if these allegations were true about backyard: https://twitter.com/ericwhiteback/status/1580921626216255490
I have that set with all the variant cards (I think slightly different combinations of players were included on some cards sold in the west compared to those sold in the east). I still need some of the poster inserts, though.I am two cards away from the 1980 Topps Basketball complete set (separated, not full 3-panels). They're hte Larry Bird rookie and the Dr J card usually attahched to the Bird rookie.
Yep I think all of the panels could be found in two different combos. That's a really impressive set to own. I realized it would be too expensive for me so I went for the detached panels.I have that set with all the variant cards (I think slightly different combinations of players were included on some cards sold in the west compared to those sold in the east). I still need some of the poster inserts, though.I am two cards away from the 1980 Topps Basketball complete set (separated, not full 3-panels). They're hte Larry Bird rookie and the Dr J card usually attahched to the Bird rookie.
I put it together about 10 years ago before the boom in prices. You could get lots of hundreds of those cards (connected panels intact) for peanuts.Yep I think all of the panels could be found in two different combos. That's a really impressive set to own. I realized it would be too expensive for me so I went for the detached panels.I have that set with all the variant cards (I think slightly different combinations of players were included on some cards sold in the west compared to those sold in the east). I still need some of the poster inserts, though.I am two cards away from the 1980 Topps Basketball complete set (separated, not full 3-panels). They're hte Larry Bird rookie and the Dr J card usually attahched to the Bird rookie.
Yeah, overall market slowed for sure from what I have seen. Inflation, people have less disposable income, etc. Plus the quality/mass prod. issues you mentioned. I bought a few boxes throughout the year, mostly for my son for Xmas, but bought pretty much no singles since maybe mid-spring.So what’s happened over the last year? Seems like mass production is back and quality levels have gone down. Prices on current stars seems to have settled back to pre-Covid levels and prices on legends seem steady.
Good lord. I've literally not heard a peep with it in a year or so from anyone after it was all the rage for a few months.I don’t let the graders bother me. I couldn’t think of a bigger scam than buying cards at Walmart, then sending them in for grading at $10/pop. The only grading I will deal with is the authentication on old autographs. When Brock Purdy is selling for more than Jalen Hurts rookies, that’s a problem.Massive bubble pop on today's products. Courtjester spot on with the fake demand.
Could be worse and out lots for the NFT/Crypto crap/house of cards. Top shot this. Remember when that was a thing?Good lord. I've literally not heard a peep with it in a year or so from anyone after it was all the rage for a few months.
Grading scam was the end of trading cards for me. I'm sure there's lots of "good buys" for ungraded for collectors. I do still buy old unopened starting lineups time-to-time (and only old). And never the marked up graded crap. Starting lineup just released new edition Starting lineups in 2022. Believe they're wanting $50+ for them. Yeah no thanks.
Then you have hobby boxes like Select 2021 that are going for about half of what they were at release. Bet some breakers are taking a bath on that product.Throw in the fact. hobby prices haven't adjusted and are still beyond the means of the average collector (especially considering the economy) and you have the correction you are seeing.
I think that was the 1st year they were sold in retail also.Then you have hobby boxes like Select 2021 that are going for about half of what they were at release. Bet some breakers are taking a bath on that product.Throw in the fact. hobby prices haven't adjusted and are still beyond the means of the average collector (especially considering the economy) and you have the correction you are seeing.
Man its been a learning experience these past couple years. Thing I learned the most is Grade grade grade. You just gotta know the right sets/players and of course timing is everything. I just sent off my 2nd ever submission and am already realizing I probably messed it up a little (sent in w original penny sleeves that have been sitting in a closet for 2+ years, definitely some dust particles in some of those!) but the buying raw, grading, selling good grades method seems to be "THE" best for what I'm trying to do (build up a cool collection of NBA stars and NFL QBs). One thing I have learned really is to keep the process churning. Also, mainly DIVERSIFY, got damn man, I got like 100+ Lance cards and well, his market is "Shaky" to say the least. Got a couple Ja rookies, Burrows and Hurts to come back shortly. Will post the results!
Oh yeah 100%. Just need a good clean micro fiber cloth to do the trick!Man its been a learning experience these past couple years. Thing I learned the most is Grade grade grade. You just gotta know the right sets/players and of course timing is everything. I just sent off my 2nd ever submission and am already realizing I probably messed it up a little (sent in w original penny sleeves that have been sitting in a closet for 2+ years, definitely some dust particles in some of those!) but the buying raw, grading, selling good grades method seems to be "THE" best for what I'm trying to do (build up a cool collection of NBA stars and NFL QBs). One thing I have learned really is to keep the process churning. Also, mainly DIVERSIFY, got damn man, I got like 100+ Lance cards and well, his market is "Shaky" to say the least. Got a couple Ja rookies, Burrows and Hurts to come back shortly. Will post the results!
From what I have heard/learned from grading ultra modern stuff is cleaning your cards before grading in a must.
I haven't sent in too much of ultra modern so never cleaned what I sent but I heaar it should be done.
Do you just grade with PSA? One of the guys I follow on TikTok seems to use CSG and goes over the cards before hand. Was thinking of using that down the line.Man its been a learning experience these past couple years. Thing I learned the most is Grade grade grade. You just gotta know the right sets/players and of course timing is everything. I just sent off my 2nd ever submission and am already realizing I probably messed it up a little (sent in w original penny sleeves that have been sitting in a closet for 2+ years, definitely some dust particles in some of those!) but the buying raw, grading, selling good grades method seems to be "THE" best for what I'm trying to do (build up a cool collection of NBA stars and NFL QBs). One thing I have learned really is to keep the process churning. Also, mainly DIVERSIFY, got damn man, I got like 100+ Lance cards and well, his market is "Shaky" to say the least. Got a couple Ja rookies, Burrows and Hurts to come back shortly. Will post the results!
Way late on this, but yes I only grade with PSA. They have their issues like any company, specifically right now its the newer employees grading cards a little too tough. But with that said, PSA has the highest resale value for a card than any other grading company by a mile. Beckett/BGS is a far 2nd to me then potentially SGC/The Tuxedo slabs look nice. Due to the fact you might get a tough grader, I am splitting up my orders for a few reasons 1. To avoid some guy going through the entire stack and getting unfavorable grades, and 2. for whatever reason, the large stacks just take a "LONG" time to come back. Will see how they work out, I have been aggressively stacking 3 players the last few months: Trevor Lawrence, Joe Burrow and Jalen Hurts rookies. Nothing crazy just some stuff from the more collectible sets. The Lawrence hype is very real.Do you just grade with PSA? One of the guys I follow on TikTok seems to use CSG and goes over the cards before hand. Was thinking of using that down the line.Man its been a learning experience these past couple years. Thing I learned the most is Grade grade grade. You just gotta know the right sets/players and of course timing is everything. I just sent off my 2nd ever submission and am already realizing I probably messed it up a little (sent in w original penny sleeves that have been sitting in a closet for 2+ years, definitely some dust particles in some of those!) but the buying raw, grading, selling good grades method seems to be "THE" best for what I'm trying to do (build up a cool collection of NBA stars and NFL QBs). One thing I have learned really is to keep the process churning. Also, mainly DIVERSIFY, got damn man, I got like 100+ Lance cards and well, his market is "Shaky" to say the least. Got a couple Ja rookies, Burrows and Hurts to come back shortly. Will post the results!
Very cool stuff!My son is getting into sports cards.....we are big into baseball, and we have season tix to Oregon State baseball.
First two packs of Topps my son gets he gets an Adley Rutschman, and a Steven Kwan.......we were super pumped! Now all he wants to do is buy more cars packs! Good times. Need a Trevor Larnach and a Drew Rasmussen now.
I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
This is what I figured....just wasn't sure if there was a "set grading" option. This is a sentimental thing for me more than anything. When I found his cards (I was like 12) he needed about 100 cards...most of them were commons, but a few that were in the $50-$75 range (at the time....late 80s early 90s). He had SO many of the "good" ones that we sold/traded several of them for most of what was needed. Don Drysdale, Mickie Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ted Williams....all those guys he had 5-6 of EACH. It was unreal. We kept the best two of each one and used the rest to fund our quest.Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
I’ve got the 1957 Mays and Aaron, and this thread has now inspired me to get the other 405 cards to complete the set. Ordered 9 off eBay today, so I guess I’m down to 396.This is what I figured....just wasn't sure if there was a "set grading" option. This is a sentimental thing for me more than anything. When I found his cards (I was like 12) he needed about 100 cards...most of them were commons, but a few that were in the $50-$75 range (at the time....late 80s early 90s). He had SO many of the "good" ones that we sold/traded several of them for most of what was needed. Don Drysdale, Mickie Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ted Williams....all those guys he had 5-6 of EACH. It was unreal. We kept the best two of each one and used the rest to fund our quest.Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
Haha heck yeah man. Go get that Jackie and Teddy Ballgame too!!I’ve got the 1957 Mays and Aaron, and this thread has now inspired me to get the other 405 cards to complete the set. Ordered 9 off eBay today, so I guess I’m down to 396.This is what I figured....just wasn't sure if there was a "set grading" option. This is a sentimental thing for me more than anything. When I found his cards (I was like 12) he needed about 100 cards...most of them were commons, but a few that were in the $50-$75 range (at the time....late 80s early 90s). He had SO many of the "good" ones that we sold/traded several of them for most of what was needed. Don Drysdale, Mickie Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ted Williams....all those guys he had 5-6 of EACH. It was unreal. We kept the best two of each one and used the rest to fund our quest.Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
If I had the cards in my possession, I'd try to help out best I could, but they are at my mom's house with a big "DO NOT TOUCH" sign on them as a reminder to my motherI’ve got the 1957 Mays and Aaron, and this thread has now inspired me to get the other 405 cards to complete the set. Ordered 9 off eBay today, so I guess I’m down to 396.This is what I figured....just wasn't sure if there was a "set grading" option. This is a sentimental thing for me more than anything. When I found his cards (I was like 12) he needed about 100 cards...most of them were commons, but a few that were in the $50-$75 range (at the time....late 80s early 90s). He had SO many of the "good" ones that we sold/traded several of them for most of what was needed. Don Drysdale, Mickie Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ted Williams....all those guys he had 5-6 of EACH. It was unreal. We kept the best two of each one and used the rest to fund our quest.Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.

There is a good 1957 set builders page on FB, collectors selling to collectors.I’ve got the 1957 Mays and Aaron, and this thread has now inspired me to get the other 405 cards to complete the set. Ordered 9 off eBay today, so I guess I’m down to 396.This is what I figured....just wasn't sure if there was a "set grading" option. This is a sentimental thing for me more than anything. When I found his cards (I was like 12) he needed about 100 cards...most of them were commons, but a few that were in the $50-$75 range (at the time....late 80s early 90s). He had SO many of the "good" ones that we sold/traded several of them for most of what was needed. Don Drysdale, Mickie Mantle, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Ted Williams....all those guys he had 5-6 of EACH. It was unreal. We kept the best two of each one and used the rest to fund our quest.Yep. I’ve seen it done but every card would need to be individually graded which doesn’t make much sense financially. Just get the key cards graded and enjoy that amazing set.I honestly do not know but man, what an crazy amazing awesome set to have!! Very very cool stuff. It won't be cheap to grade them but will definitely be worth it.Dumb question (maybe?):
Are there grades for sets or is it just individual cards? I have a 1957 Topps baseball set that my dad and I finished from when he was a kid. MOST of the cards are in pretty good shape, but I'm wondering if they will grade the set as a whole.
Just know that vintage cards fresh from the pack are rarely a 9 or 10. I’d guess those Favres you’re sitting on are in the 7-8 range if graded by psa. Probably the only Favre card worth grading is a Wild Card 1000 stripe.If I were going to get some cards graded what's that process look like and which company is the best to go to? I can't get past shipping the cards off to someone and not being guaranteed to get the exact same card back.
My wife was cleaning out her closet and it made me open up a couple bins of cards I have here and I have some Brett Favre rookie cards that went from the pack straight into rigid plastic protectors and I never messed with them again. Thinking they can be worth some dough. I have 10 or so of his Upper Deck rookie and three of his Stadium Club rookie. I'm going to take them to a local shop to get an initial reaction, but figure the real value only comes if they are graded.
Oh, and now I need to dig through the other 50 or so boxes I have to remember what all I actually have and NONE of this is the collection my dad had that's still at my mom's house.
You can just get your own account/membership with PSA and go that route. Their turnaround times have gotten much better. Also—the poster that mentioned that cards from your era that come straight out of the pack rarely are in 9 or 10 condition is pretty accurate. You’ll want to invest in a magnifying glass or loupe and really inspect the surfaces of each card for scratches, dimples, dents. You also might want to get a millimeter gauge as well as download one of the apps that helps determine the centering of each card before sending them in. With PSA—if the centering is 60/40 or better—you probably still have a shot at a 9 or better if everything else is solid. Also—when you do check for centering—make sure you check left to right, top to bottom—and both the front and back of the card. If you see any fingerprints on any of the cards—you’ll also want to invest in a micro-fiber cloth and very carefully wipe them down.If I were going to get some cards graded what's that process look like and which company is the best to go to? I can't get past shipping the cards off to someone and not being guaranteed to get the exact same card back.
My wife was cleaning out her closet and it made me open up a couple bins of cards I have here and I have some Brett Favre rookie cards that went from the pack straight into rigid plastic protectors and I never messed with them again. Thinking they can be worth some dough. I have 10 or so of his Upper Deck rookie and three of his Stadium Club rookie. I'm going to take them to a local shop to get an initial reaction, but figure the real value only comes if they are graded.
Oh, and now I need to dig through the other 50 or so boxes I have to remember what all I actually have and NONE of this is the collection my dad had that's still at my mom's house.
They often come from the packs just extremely rare due to higher grading standards and population control by PSA.Where do the 9s and 10s come from?
Already have a graded one of these......and honestly, these other cards look better and seemingly more crisp. Have all the gear to check them out from the coins I have, but I always thought it was pretty much centering edges and no blemishes like dimples....if they do finger prints and all that stupid **** now, it seems to be a waste of money....arbitrary to say the least.They often come from the packs just extremely rare due to higher grading standards and population control by PSA.Where do the 9s and 10s come from?
This guy sending in 50 Griffey UD rookies will give you an idea how tough grading is even if the cards look great: https://youtu.be/Pc6UmhNM2oo
There is a little bump in short term demand. The bigger demand is in autographs. Even so, legends like Koufax and Mays prices are already very high and their death will barely affect pricing.I have a pretty good condition Jim Brown rookie card. I wonder how values change with the death of a superstar? Or if it even changes at all?
How do you buy them?Anyone chasing the first opportunity at Victor Wembanyama in Bowman Chrome University Basketball?
You can pick blasters up at about $25 and was thinking of buying a couple, and either opening or maybe just holding for a while.
Like anything else, eBay, Fanatics, Walmart, etc...How do you buy them?Anyone chasing the first opportunity at Victor Wembanyama in Bowman Chrome University Basketball?
You can pick blasters up at about $25 and was thinking of buying a couple, and either opening or maybe just holding for a while.