Thanks to anjcollection
marty
Posts: 202
A short while back, someone asked about 1949 Bowman cards. anjcollection gave some information and said that he got it from "The Complete Book of Collectible Baseball Cards". I looked it up on amazon.com and bought a used on for $5.00 plus shipping. I just got it today. 380 pages, 1985 copyright by Bob Lemke put out by Consumer Guide. It covers a lot of issues from 1885 through 1984. There are a lot of tobacco, gum, candy, food issues described. It gives a history of the set, specs, noteworthy cards, pros and cons of the set and a 5-year projection.
1974 Deckle $750.00 on exmt with projection below average.
1970 Kellogg's $50.00 5-year above average
1911 T3 $8500.00 5-year below average
1954 Wilson's $1500.00 5-year below average
1980 Kellogg's $7.50 5-year well above average
There were several on amazon for different prices from different sellers. I would have paid over $20.00 for it if I had too.
A great addition to my reference library.
1974 Deckle $750.00 on exmt with projection below average.
1970 Kellogg's $50.00 5-year above average
1911 T3 $8500.00 5-year below average
1954 Wilson's $1500.00 5-year below average
1980 Kellogg's $7.50 5-year well above average
There were several on amazon for different prices from different sellers. I would have paid over $20.00 for it if I had too.
A great addition to my reference library.
0
Comments
It is currently going for $23.99 on Amazon (new).
JEB.
The thing is huge, over 1700 pages and a ton of info at your fingertips...jay
Website: http://www.qualitycards.com
<< <i>...The thing is huge, over 1700 pages and a ton of info at your fingertips...jay >>
It is huge. It makes me not feel so bad about sitting at the computer for an hour searching for rare cards when I have to pick it up off of the floor repeatedly to look up a card - quite a workout!
JEB.
Always looking for Topps Salesman Samples, pre '51 unopened packs, E90-2, E91a, N690 Kalamazoo Bats, and T204 Square Frame Ramly's
<< <i>The book was too big for me. I took a large utility knife and cut the new issue half completely out, then retaped the cover. 1st show I was at found a kid that looked pretty into it and gave him the post '80 or so half the book. His look was worth the price of the whole book. >>
Good idea, but I think I'll stick with the whole book ... if you saw what it's done for my biceps, you'd be wishing that you had the modern half back!
JEB.
Old Vintage Baseball Cards
eBay Auctions
PS. I second that comment about the 1954 Wilson Franks...it's kinda funny to read... Projection (their guess as to the set's investment value) BELOW AVERAGE. A Williams was booking for $600 back then (in NRMT condition I believe). I think a 4 just went for over $2200 on eBay this past week!
<< <i>The book was too big for me. I took a large utility knife and cut the new issue half completely out, then retaped the cover. 1st show I was at found a kid that looked pretty into it and gave him the post '80 or so half the book. His look was worth the price of the whole book. >>
That's perfect Griff !!! I can't say I ever use the back half of that book. I wish they broke the books for the other sports out that way as well so I could tear those out too!!
Thanks,
Abe
Good to hear from you.
I think you're talking football here? The catalog that is being discussed is the Standard Catalog of Baseball Cards.
Sorry if I'm wrong.
JEB.
Thanks for the welcome. I hope your doing well, I've seen you buying some great Willie Stargell stuff lately.
No, I'm actually speaking of the baseball catalog. I was just curious if they had included some common non-card items in it. I haven't bought one for a few years and need to get a new one, was just checking before grabbing one on amazon.
Thanks,
Abe
Sorry, I thought they might be Dorsett items - I noticed you've been active in that department recently.
To answer your question, the 2004 Standard Catalog of Baseball Cards does not include the 2 issues that you mentioned. They have gone beyond just cards, though. I see Coca Cola Bottle caps, Topps coins, Mattel Records, etc. listed. It seems that they are on the verge of breaking out of the 2nd dimension!
Although this catalog is much more complete than any other resource I know of, I too would like to see it expand to include even more obscure items (even if they are not that rare).
JEB.
Thanks for the info., it is useful. Your right, I've had some good luck with Tony D lately, hopefully that will continue. Do you happen to know if the Beckett almanac goes any further with non-card items? It's funny, I never use these books for prices any longer, mostly for info and checklists.
Abe