Showing posts with label Serial-numbered inserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serial-numbered inserts. Show all posts

Thursday, July 20, 2023

6/2 and 6/30 card show reports: summertime shows

If there's anything I've been wanting to clear off of my card desk for the past month, it's the stuff I picked up at both shows I attended last month. So let's look at both of those in today's post!

Both of these were Taylor Town monthly shows but both occurred in June because of calendar weirdness as the second was actually part of the first weekend in July. #1 was Friday, the 2nd, and I came home with one of the bigger piles of cards from that place in quite a while. My notes indicate the following:

  • 180 dime cards = $18
  • 40 $1 cards = $40
  • 10 $2 cards = $20
  • 1 $5 card = $5
That's an $83 total and my dude quoted me $75, so I was quite happy. I went nuts in the dime boxes largely because I found large groups of serial numbered cards that would make for excellent trade bait here or on TCDb. Enjoy these next SEVEN scans worth of stuff, most of which is still available (please just ask or find me on TCDb!):
Baseball: Cain /499 and /250; Ruan /2001; Sizemore/Garko /299; Sizemore /150; Billingsley auto /150
Favres: I still have 04, 31(x2), 82(x2), 93, and 403 still available
SN football 1/4: Tatum Bell /599, LeGarrette Blount /2012; Bowe /949; Canidate /2500 and /1500; Claiborne /500; Davis /799; Tim Dwight /750; Fauria /250
SN football 2/4: Franklin /249; Griffin /500; Hass /499; Jackson /250, Johnson /299; Keller /999; McCauley and Parker /500 (Moore no longer available)
SN football 3/4: Rhodes /175; Tate /499; Taylor /750; Thomas /400; Turbin /462; White /2500; Young /250
SN football 4/4: Carlson /499; Davis /1250; Robinson/Anderson /1000; Luke Staley no longer available; Williamson /250
Football hits: I scored some very nice ones considering the low prices! Coutee /99; Olson /999; Ito Smith /25; Colston/Cotchery no longer available; Latimer /399; Nelson /149


Here are my dime pickups, which managed to hit six different PCs. Not bad for $0.10 each, right?
The rest of my baseball pickups came from the $2 and $5 boxes (I believe none were $1, can't remember). Can't go wrong with the former blog namesake especially when it's a Detroit uni card numbered /10! Maddux's UD insert is of the numbered variety, "limited" to 4000 copies, and of course it gives me the warm fuzzies from the era when inserts were still good. It may be logoless but I didn't think I should be picky about landing my first Casey Mize auto for just $5. And how about a dual relic of HOF P Jack Morris and a guy repping the team he beat in 1984 for Detroit's most recent World Series? All day, every day, friends.

In terms of football the dime box treated me well with a new insert of Rashan Gary and a pair of Nico Collins rookie-related offerings, and then for a buck or two I also added a Collins parallel /249 from Certified.

Considering I came home with 231 cards, even after showing off unclaimed trade bait and my keepers, that means a LOT of this stuff went out in trade packages, which is usually my #1 goal for stuff I find at shows, so this one worked out great.

When I headed back on Friday, the 30th for the July version, it was a different experience, but still a very productive one. I still came back with some excellent cards, but I spent much less time because the dime boxes didn't look to hold anything that piqued my interest.

Instead, my breakdown looked like this:
  • 15 from the $2/each or 3/$5 = $25
  • 15 from the $5/each or 5/$20 = $60
That's a total of $85 that even my liberal arts brain can figure out.

The trade bait group is much smaller but the quality's quite good:
Wright is /299; Tannehill is /180; Bowe/Meachem/Davis is /175

Again, please claim those if you're interested in any and we'll work something out.

My own haul also stepped up in quality from that of the earlier show since everything was $2 or $5:
Ex-Wolverine Nwogu looks extra good on a parallel that matches his team's jersey, and this Heritage Minors insert is limited to 99 copies. I probably wouldn't have minded spending more than the $2 it took to score my third auto (to go with an auto/plate) of Jesse Franklin rocking the Maize & Blue. BInge may not be with the Tigers OR Wolverines anymore but $2 (less after the discount) was fair enough to snag a jersey of his for my second relic (to go with one autograph) of the former Michigan Baseball special assistant.

Meanwhile, you won't see me drop this much on basketball very often, but I found a trio of very nice former UM BB stars in the $5 box. I already had one signature of Iggy but that's my first auto/relic (also numbered /199) and is likely my new best card of the Lithuanian-by-way-of-Canada cager. THJ's signature may not be the most legible but it's also not a lazy couple of dashes, plus he adds his jersey number. I wish the foil-y card (SN99) scanned better, but my fifth auto of the younger Hardaway looks great in person. And I don't know what to make of Juwan Howard's coaching at Michigan, which seemed to start on a great note and has since been less than great, but I still wasn't going to pass up an autograph of one of the more successful Wolverines in the NBA for just my second signature of his.

I may have inadvertently saved the best for last with the football offerings. Another Braylon relic (/115) is nothing to turn up my nose at, and that makes 71 such cards of his 93 hits. But my favorite pickup of the day is Nico Collins' 2022 Panini Elements autograph. These cards are printed on metal and thicker than printing plates, and I've become a big fan of such cards because the color really pops on the material. I'm also excited that it's a new autograph of a potential future star who may finally get a QB throwing to him that isn't a compete and total bum. I now have three cards featuring his signature.

While I'm at it since I obviously think it looks so cool, check out the back:
Again, the print quality on the metal is great, but I also couldn't help but be drawn to the printed out serial numbering in the upper-left corner. It makes sense since the usual stamping wouldn't work, but since this is my first card of this type that wasn't a printing plate, it surprised me for a minute. Long story short, great card, great deal!

That covers the June and July shows in Taylor, and now I get to decide what I want to show off next.

Friday, October 16, 2020

2020 eBay purchase: Many "M" Minis

Today's post is a quick recap of yet another purchase from my favorite eBay seller, markaguirre22. Among his auctions he tends to list stuff that must have been part of a pretty nice Michigan PC, and those usually start at $1. Also he offers free shipping on everything, which is super rare these days.

This time I kept an eye on four numbered cards that I secured for $1 each plus tax, though my total was less than $4 thanks to eBay bucks. Once again I was quite happy with my haul, which he even shipped in a bubble mailer despite shipping being gratis:

The first four cards you see here are the ones I bought, plus, as has happened before, the seller threw in a nice extra he knew I'd like. The third mini you see of tackling machine David Harris was a bit smaller than the rest so I set it aside, and it happens to be the oldest as it's from 2010 Topps Magic. That product included three small parallels: Mini, Mini Black, and the numbered Mini Pigskin 50, which is what you see above.

The rest of the cards hail from Topps' 2013 Mini product where all of the cards, including base, were printed with smaller dimensions. Harris joins blog favorite PC guy Chad Henne and former blog namesake Mario Manningham (the throw-in card!) out of the Gold parallel, where the cards were numbered /58.

Speaking of Henne and Super Mario, yesterday was the 15th anniversary of one of the best moments in the history of the Big House:

That clip still gets me every time I watch it. Anyway, all those at $1 apiece (plus the free Manningham) were already a nice deal, but then we get to the card I was surprised didn't get a second bid: Harris's Black parallel. While cards numbered /58 don't feel extremely rare these days, ones that had only five copies made certainly do! As the legendary clip says,
That was easily less than $4 well spent. I now count 92 cards of Harris, 308 of Henne, and 221 of Manningham in their respective PCs.
And of course he's the backs for the sake of completeness.

This was another purchase post but coming up next I should have a brand new trade package to show off.

Saturday, April 20, 2019

2019 trade package #6: Parts of My Past

I've been wanting to post a nice summary of the results of The Packening but got bogged down with other stuff this week, including a bit of flooding in my basement that pretty much ate up my whole afternoon today (though nothing really got damaged, which is great).  Also, I'm way behind on covering a few other things, including the show a couple weeks ago, plus some outstanding trade packages.

Which is why today I'll be showing off my latest PWE from Matt of Parts of My Past (formerly Sport Card Collectors).  This is actually the second PWE he's sent me this month, and the most recent trade package I posted here was from Matt, my fellow enthusiast of Griffey and all things 90s, including inserts.

Here's the latest goods, all Tigers edition:
Platonic ideal of baseball's three true outcomes and former Tigers catcher Alex Avila leads things off with his 2012 Topps Gold Rush parallel.  I remember these fairly well but couldn't recall how they were inserted, then found that they were an HTA set.  The only other instance of this set that appears in my collection is Chris Getz's issue as he's a PC guy, and the name appears a lot more frequently thanks to it original incarnation as a Score parallel.

Formerly effective (but still fun to collect) slugger Miguel Cabera is next on three different recent Topps issues.  The bookends--2017 flagship's Walmart Holiday Snowflake and 2019 Gypsy Queen Chrome--look nice enough, but the real winner here is a Red parallel of his 2018 Gold Label Class 2 card (#41/50).  Though not as fun as its earlier iterations, Gold Label remains a winner, and the red looks quite striking here.  I'm thankful that folks like Matt keep sending me quality stuff like this!

Sticking with the letter "C", there's future former Tiger Nick Castellanos on a 2018 Topps Fire Green parallel (#184/199).  That's never been one of my favorite Topps products, but I do like numbered parallels, and Castellanos is a guy whose cards I plan on keeping even when he leaves Motown.  I'll be sorry to see him go because he's been fun to watch as a hitter, but also hope he's the last bat-only player Detroit signs for quite a while.

Finally, Matt followed up his previous PWE with a card that combines two of that package's features:  Ty Cobb and 2019 Topps' 150 Years of Pro Baseball insert.  In this case the Georgia Peach's card is actually the 150th Anniversary version and therefore one of the product's many cards numbered to 150 (#136/150 here).  Numbered Cobbs are few and far between in my collection so this was a nice throw-in for me.

Thanks again for the second envelope in just a few weeks, Matt!  I hope you enjoyed your flat-rate box of stuff and I'm looking forward to seeing your posts on it!

Stay tuned for a couple more trade posts soon among anything else I managed to get posted soon.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Getting my Maddux in a row

Previously:  Ken Griffey Jr., Tony Gwynn

Griffey and Gwynn have both had their day, so it's on to the pitcher for this elite quartet, Greg Maddux.  Have a gander at his album via that link and you'll see almost 100 new cards (putting him near Tony Gwynn's total of almost 400), including some interesting stuff and favorites you'll see below:

A few favorite sets:

To coin a phrase:

eTopps the league in 15-win seasons:

355 win-serts:

Completing this trio was as easy as "A" "B" "C":