Describe eye appeal importance.

When you talk about high value high demand cards are you looking for centering, registration and corners as top consideration?
Are surface creases less desirable than soft corners, is registration more important than centering?
Name your order of importance in a mid grade high dollar card:
1. Centering
2. Registration
3. Edges
4. Corners
5. Surface
Are surface creases less desirable than soft corners, is registration more important than centering?
Name your order of importance in a mid grade high dollar card:
1. Centering
2. Registration
3. Edges
4. Corners
5. Surface
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For those who want to participate and chime in I just wanted to give a little checklist format to answer the thread.
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2. Corners
3. Surface
4. Registration
5. Edges
high eye appeal card has got to be sharp & centered to begin with imo...
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Collection: https://flickr.com/photos/185200668@N06/albums
1. Centering
2. Surface
3. Corners
4. Edges
5. Registration
Obviously, registration becomes more important to "eye appeal"
if it is bad enough to detract from the card. Usually, it is not.
1. Centering - Most desirable to me
2. Registration - very important. I don't like to look at fuzzy images. (In my best Pete Puma voice) It gives me a headache!!!
3. Surface - Light wrinkles are ok but I try to avoid cards with creases.
4. Edges - Slight edge damage not a big deal to me.
4. Corners - Honest corner wear acceptable.
<< <i>When you talk about high value high demand cards are you looking for centering, registration and corners as top consideration?
Are surface creases less desirable than soft corners, is registration more important than centering?
Name your order of importance in a mid grade high dollar card:
>>
1. Corners
2. surface
3. edges
4. registration
5. centering
2. Surface
3. Corners
4. Edges
5. Registration
Next I look at the cards centering in a very instinctual way. Is he cards centering pleasing to my eye or not? If it is not I move on. Sometimes depending upon the actual photo pose/player position on the card or color borders on the card, off centered cards can be ok. I can't stand "diamond" cuts though- they ruin a cards esthetics for me and because they take so much away from the eye appeal of the card, I can't understand how a "diamond " cut can achieve a 9 mint grade. BVG toughest then GAI> PSA = SGC. Qualifiers hurt PSA here.
Next I check the Color, Registration, and Surface Gloss. In my opinion these are what really makes a high end card for a particular grade, particularly a gem mint 10 card. I don't like out of register cards at all. When I look at them I keep thinking that I need reading glasses. Deep color is really great and very slight surface scratches are ok to me. PSA is the toughest for color and surface gloss in a 10, then SGC=GAI=BVG. In a 9 SGC = GAI > PSA = BVG
Next I look at the edges. To me these are least important. A rough cut is ok in most circumstances. BVG ridiculously tough on edges to the point of scrathing your head about it. Overall PSA = SGC =GAI >>BVG
The Gestalt- Putting a card all together in vintage high grade material- PSA most realistic/consistent with a close second between GAI & SGC then BVG (because BVG too tough on corners and centering, although a BVG 9 always "looks" like a BVG 9 as well as a high end PSA/GAI/SGC 9.
Kind of confusing ain't it. Pete
corners
registration
surface
edges
<< <i>would a sweetly centered mid grade with light surface wrinkle kill a grade of a card? >>
Such a wrinkle would knock the card down to as low as 4, although I have several sweetly centered cards with a small wrinkle in 5, 5.5, and even (1) 6 holder. The wrinkle may kill the grade, but not the eye appeal.
For me:
1. Centering
2. Corners
3. Surface
4. Registration
5. Edges
I used to be much bigger on sharp edges, but having collected many OPC CFL (notorious for rough cuts) and rough '57 Topps baseball, I now see a certain charm in rough edges that I never saw before. I don't love 'em, but I can certainly live with 'em.
2. Regsitration
3. Corners
4. Surface
5. Edges
<< <i>I'm a centering nut myself so my list starts with centering. On a card in the 4-5 grade I'll take natural corner wear with perfect centering anyday over a card with sharper corners and off centering. It's all personal preference though.
1. Centering - Most desirable to me
2. Registration - very important. I don't like to look at fuzzy images. (In my best Pete Puma voice) It gives me a headache!!!
3. Surface - Light wrinkles are ok but I try to avoid cards with creases.
4. Edges - Slight edge damage not a big deal to me.
4. Corners - Honest corner wear acceptable. >>
This is mine exactly.
My small collection
Want List:
'61 Topps Roy Campanella in PSA 5-7
Cardinal T206 cards
Adam Wainwright GU Jersey
1. Registration
2. Surface
3. Corners
4. Centering
5. Edges
For a low/mid grade raw vintage card to stick in a binder, centering will be in the top, but for a graded vintage card, I regard "absence of damage" higher than centering. I'd rather have a PSA 9 OC than a PSA 7 with 50/50 centering.
The nice thing is that since centering is king for most folks, I can get cards I'm happy with for a discount.
WTB: 2001 Leaf Rookies & Stars Longevity: Ryan Jensen #/25
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