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All the graded cards I own

  Often over the years I've read blog posts or, more likely, those on social media that invite a discussion on graded cards.   My standard response -- if I do respond -- is I don't believe in graded cards in almost all cases and that I have very few graded cards in my collection. Then I feel like I have to explain that -- if I don't believe in graded cards, why do I have some in my collection? And how many do I have? I've never known that part.   So this post is about figuring that out, getting to know my graded cards and why they have the gall to exist in my collection when 99.999998% of the cards in the collection are frolicking free in the breeze as is their constitutional right.   For starters, I have nine graded cards ... well, eight cards and one coin, as you can see here. Any other graded card that has come into my possession, I have broken out. All but two of the cards/coin were sent to me by others, because I have never specifically attempted to buy a graded...
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The other half

  I stopped at the monthly card show Saturday. It was the second straight weekend card show I had attended. This would have been crazy talk in the first 10 years of my blog, but it's something that could easily happen two or three times a year now -- and if I wanted to do a little more traveling around the state, I might be able to go to a show nearly every week over the next six months.   I'm not quite that obsessed. Two in two weeks is quite amazing enough for me.   So you may remember in the show write-up last week that I said I actually finished the show with cash left over. That means I carried that cash into Saturday's show. I padded it just a little, but I budgeted about half the amount for this show that I did for last week's.   It turned out to be plenty because I left this show with money left over, too!  I'd like to blame the expanding number of tables selling Pokemon and such -- it's getting so pervasive that I'm starting to see a world where the...

Gearing up

    In one day, I will be on a long-awaited vacation.   It's my first vacation since Thanksgiving -- and, yes, I know that's a cue for someone to say they haven't had a vacation in 20 years -- but it seems like a long time to me. Also, this vacation actually ushers in "The Vacation Season," which lasts until the sad, sad final moments of August.   During work week-after-work week I think about the things I'll do on vacation and plot out strategies. These usually have to do with the hobby, but also mundane things like shopping for clothes and visiting that flea market I keep forgetting about. It's amazing what gets lost in the rubble of having a job.   Because it's just one week off -- and some of that involves family obligations -- I won't get to everything. But here are some of the things I hope to get to:   1. Send out those Dodger packages   I've promised mailings of extra Dodgers for several folks. I sent out two earlier this week and I kno...

My first Dodger card continued ... after a long break

    Eight years ago now, I wrote a post called " My first Dodger card " in which I listed the first Dodger card I pulled each year I have collected -- or tried to since many years I couldn't remember.   The more recent years were easier because I have a blog and document the first packs I open each year, fortunately there have been Dodgers inside of almost every one.   In that 8-year-old post, I wrote that I planned to update it if I could get my brain to remember the first Dodger I pulled in, say, 1982. I also planned to continue the post for future years.   Well, after eight years of silence, that's what I'm doing now. I haven't bothered to update that post with my fresh memories of what I pulled in 1983 or 1989 or 2007. That requires many minutes of quiet reflection and who has time for that now?   So those years are still blank. But I can update the years since 2017. So I'll do that. I know you don't care, but this is for me, because I've been ...

Show without a net

  Yesterday I attended the big show at the state fairgrounds that goes off twice a year. The last time I was there was in September and I obtained the majority of cards from three dealers who are almost always there and almost always get the majority of my business.   I was so confident that they would be there this time that I didn't bother to update my blog want lists or to finally figure out how to access my TCDB want lists on my phone. I just took my hand-penned want list for 1969 Topps and 1979 Topps football and stuffed them in my pocket. If two of those dealers were there, then that would be sufficient.   Well, neither of the two were there. This was a crisis because they are there so often I automatically thought something was wrong. Then I realized just about all my vintage options were gone. The crumpled list in my pocket was useless.   It was time to regroup, though after I did, I walked the show with a lot more uneasiness than I usually do. Not only were...

Just posting a little nonsense

  It was kind of busy this weekend. I went down for a card show today and it takes quite a bit of driving -- this is the bigger one, instead of the one right in town.   I'll have a full report on that in the next day or two, but I wanted to make a quick observation about some very modern cards for a moment.   The above three cards sit consecutively in the 2025 Topps portion of my Dodgers binder. They are all parallels. But they are not the same parallel.   Perhaps you can tell from the image. I realized after taking pictures that the differences are a little more obvious in the photos than if you're just looking at them with the naked eye. But let's go through the "differences" shall we?    River Ryan is the "Holo Foil" parallel.      Teoscar Hernandez is the "Confetti" parallel.       Shohei Ohtani is the "Sandglitter" parallel.   None of these parallels are numbered, which would have helped narrow things down. As you can...

C.A.: 1941 Play Ball "Dolph" Camilli

(Happy National Pet Day. There was a point a couple years ago when I thought there'd never be another pet in the house. I even wrote about it. Today, there's a cat who is about to turn one all up in my business. Knocked over a bunch of cards today. She's officially part of my hobby. Time for Cardboard Appreciation, this is the 351st in a series):   I reached a collecting milestone yesterday when this 1941 Play Ball card of former Brooklyn Dodgers MVP first baseman Dolph Camilli arrived.   Although I have a modest number of pre-1950s baseball cards, this was the first time I ever purchased one. Everything else pre-1950 has arrived as a gift or in a trade.   I've written many times that I collect cards for which I feel a connection. Those are mostly cards related to my childhood, my adolescence, my first disposable income days and all the way to the present time. If I know the players -- especially if I have seen them play and read about them when they were playing -- the...