What do you call vintage?
Wabittwax
Posts: 1,984 ✭✭✭
I saw this in another post, someone was asking if 1973 is considered vintage. What years do you guys consider vintage? At what point does 1988 Donruss become vintage? I consider 1980 and and before vintage because 1980 sells as good as some earlier years. Right at 1981, cards start to really decline in popularity. I know some of the big vintage guys would totally disagree. As years go by, more stuff will be considered vintage. What do you all think?
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Always looking for 1957 Topps BB in PSA 9!
I believe the general public or bystanders assume any thing 25 years or more is vintage, thus 1978 and before is vintage. The 1980 and before idea is promoted by Beckett and has some logic as it the final year Topps had a monopoly and was the only issuer of a full set of baseball cards. To me this is fine, old enough, rare enough, and has a finite meaning , the final year of the "simple"or pure one set issuance. Before the real glut of multiple brands , inserts, and so on.
Some see 1973, the last year of series issued cards as the benchmark for " Vintage". Many think 1956 the last year BB was made in non-stand size, as a proper mark for " Vintage". Others view pre-war as real vintage.
There is no CORRECT time frame, it is how we see it. Vintage , Antique, Classic, Old-time, Etc. are all concepts based upon our own frame of references or personal feelings. I do like 1980 as a starting point, and various publications do concurr. But who really is right ??? If one is 70+ years old, his idea is probably different than that of an 18 year old. Old, real old, extremley old, what's relavent to you.. ????
Sets - 1970, 1971 and 1972
Always looking for 1972 O-PEE-CHEE Baseball in PSA 9 or 10!
lynnfrank@earthlink.net
outerbankyank on eBay!
Setting a demarcation point earlier than 1970 is a little too snobbish, in my opinion. Cases for years in the 1970's:
Here are some ideas about where to put the "last vintage year."
1970, 71, 72: No real case.
1973: Last set issued in series.
1974-6: No real case.
1977: Dale Murphy RC caused something of a non-kid stir, but this is too obscure.
1978: No real case.
1979: Last year in the 70's, but 1980 was similar, and after 1980, everything really did change. It seems kind of strange to orphan 1980.
1980 makes the best case because it's the last year of just Topps in baseball. After that year, adults were really starting to pay more attention, too. In the 1970's, moms were still throwing away your cards. In the early 80's, moms had figured out the cards were worth cash dollars and were starting to buy them themselves. My mother bought a box of '82 Donruss and put it in the closet for years. In 1981, people were putting Joe Charboneau RC's in soft-sleeves.
bruce
Website: http://www.brucemo.com
Email: brucemo@seanet.com
<< <i>WAY IN THE FUTURE I THINK THE BASEBALL CARDS VINTAGE/MODERN LINE WILL BE DRAWN AT THE TIME WHEN GUM STOPPED BEING PUT INTO THE PACKS. >>
That is an interesting point. I'd say I might agree with that someday in the future. By the way, what year was that? I stopped buying packs in the early/mid '80s but decided to pick up some packs in '91 (I have no explanation for this and can't remember if there was gum or not).
JEB.
Joe
If that's the last vintage year though, something is wrong.
bruce
Website: http://www.brucemo.com
Email: brucemo@seanet.com
Once Rickey H. finally retires, vintage will have only former players, and therfore rookie cards which are not overly speculative.
BRUCEMO SURE IT SOUNDS STRANGE NOW TO LOOK AT THE MODERN/VINTAGE LINE BASED ON THE GUM. SAYING ALL THAT OVERPRODUCED 80'S STUFF IS VINTAGE SEEMS RIDICULOUS. BUT WAY IN THE FUTURE I THINK COLLECTORS WILL SEE THE REMOVAL OF GUM FROM PACKS AS THE KEY SEPERATING POINT BETWEEN THE VINTAGE AND MODERN ERAS. THINK ABOUT IT BRUCEMO. IT WAS THE TIME WHEN THE MANUFACTURERS STARTED CARING ABOUT THE CONDITION OF THE CARDS. THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING IN THE CARD COLLECTING WORLD.
I actually think something more similar to what the comic book industry uses might work well with baseball cards. Maybe some comic book collectors can chime in, but I think they use "Golden Age", "Silver Age" and "Bronze Age". Not sure exactly what the years are.
For baseball, everyone would never agree on what years each "Age" would be, but a rough attempt might look something like this:
1st Group:everything up to 1950. Personally, I'd prefer to see this broken down much further since most of what I collect falls in this group and it's tough to consider a Gypsy Queen or Kalamazoo Bats card in the same category as 1949 Bowman, but it still seems like the best option.
2nd Group: 1951 to 1972. Obviously the first somewhat real Topps issue. I'm not sure where you guys place 1972, but around there seems to be where people feel that the era changes. I'm not exactly sure why, but I'm sure there's a reason.
3rd Group: 1972 to 1988 or so. This category could possibly go to whenever all the crazy refractor stuff started happening and each year had 50 different cards.
4th Group: 1988 or so, or whenever all the crazy refractor stuff started happening and each year had 50 different cards - to present.
Something like that might work. I would like to point out that to me, it makes more sense to put 1951 to 1980 as one category instead of ending in 1972. Then 1981 (when there were Topps, Donruss and Fleer) until whenever the refractor stuff started.
Any way, please realize that any system is going to be problematic and have its flaws. I have heard other people mention 1968 or so when cards started being double-printed as being a good dividing line.
Sorry for the long post
-Ryan
Joe
And Jaxxr, when Henderson does eventually quit, Jesse Orosco and his bionic arm will still be around, representing the '80 set.
The "designated hitter"
Hank Aaron as a Brewer
Willie Mays as a Met
Any of these things found in your set.................. it ain't vintage.
Semi-Vintage-1958-69.
Modern-1970 and newer
The number of years old a set is from today should never be used as the standard.
Davalillo
My Auctions
The number of years old a set is from today should never be used as the standard.
I agree with Davalillo's statement, but I say that vintage is pre 1980. I would bet that in 25 years the 2003 sets are NOT going to be called vintage.
tradelist
Collector of Vintage Golf cards! Let me know what you might have.