The other day I displayed this photo on a post to celebrate the fact that my 2011 Topps Lineage minis set was finally fully paged.
But there is one thing very unusual about this photo when it comes to my collection:
The cards are inserted one per pocket.
With virtually all of my sets, I insert cards two to a pocket.
I know this makes me odd. I had no idea exactly how odd until I started a blog. It seems that most binder folks store their sets one card to a pocket. Periodically, when the topic comes up as it did earlier today, and I inform people that I double-bag pages, I get a "you do WHAT?", and then after my response, I get a "well if you must."
And I do "must".
Putting two cards in each pocket began out of necessity. When I was a teenager and first became aware of pages and binders to display a collection, I didn't have any money. Back then, you could find pages only through mail-order catalogs. They weren't readily available and they weren't cheap. Also, binders were reserved for school. A spare binder was a luxury.
So I conserved both pages and binders by putting two cards in each pocket with their backs facing each other. I had no problem with this. The card back was the least attractive part of the card, it didn't need to be displayed. And if I wanted to look at the card back, I'd simply take out the card.
As the years went on and my collection grew, I continued to double-bag pages for the same reasons. Money is always tight.
Then space became an issue.
When you live in a house with people, there is only so much of the house that is "yours". I've pushed the limits of where my cards can go as much as I can. There is only so much space they can take up without bringing in counselors.
I now have 60 binders full of cards. I just counted them. The room where most of them are stored is packed. No more will fit. I have a closet area where I might be able to fit a few if I need the space. After that, my only option is the basement and I don't like that idea at all. (It's possible I could acquire or build some shelving, but that also comes with issues of its own).
If I were to take all of the cards out of the pages and re-file them with one card to a page, I would double the number of binders I needed, and there is no way I'm doing that. No room. No money.
Besides, I just like the look of my double-bagged binders.
Here's what I like about them:
This is a look at the innards of my 1971 Topps binder. I love that I can see full-color faces of 17 players (plus one entire team) in one glance.
You can't do that if you limit cards one to a pocket. Instead it would look like this:
That doesn't look nearly as pretty as seeing full-color cards on facing pages.
I'm beginning to understand that I'm in the minority on this issue. But I still don't understand why.
I know some say they want to see the card backs. I value card backs as much as anyone -- I've written enough posts about card backs -- but really there aren't very many that are worth being on display at all times. If I want to see the back, I'll take out the card.
I know taking out a card makes some collectors squeamish, but really what are you risking by removing a card? Unless it's a super vintage card, TAKE IT OUT. It's a card, it's meant to be handled. If you can't remove it, maybe it should be in a toploader and not a binder.
But I do make exceptions to my two-cards-per-pocket rule.
The 1956 Topps cards I have are one to a pocket. The card backs on '56 are the best card backs of all-time. I refuse to cover those up.
Also, my 1975 Topps minis are also one to a pocket. But that's because the pages were free, man. There all kinds of exceptions when pages don't cost a cent.
That's also why the Lineage minis are one to a pocket, too.
But I don't anticipate any other sets being that way.
If I was attempting to complete a set from the '50s or the '60s, I would consider one card per pocket. The card backs are a little more memorable than the backs from sets from the '70s through today, and there's something about absorbing the entire card from a set that old.
But as for other sets?
I couldn't possibly go from this:
To this:
Comments
Most cards that I have in pages aren't in sleeves. But a handful are. They do fit. But it can get tricky.
That said, I also think it really depends on the card involved. Backs on cards from about 1960 till the early 1990s -- really, till Upper Deck in 1989 -- were insomnia-curing. Like those 1983 Topps -- perfect for the back-to-back treatment. But if the back of the card is reasonably attractive or interesting -- those awesome 1993 Leaf, for instance, with the city scenes -- then I want to see them.
In the past 10 years, I have switched over to ultra-pro pages and put 1 card per pocket. It was more to prevent card edge and corner damage when putting cards in the pages, but the byproduct of being able to view the backs was good also. After all, even though the backs aren't as attractive as the fronts, there's a wealth of "super-important information" on them (or at least we thought so back then).
I had never dreamed of putting 18 cards on a page until I read it here, I'm slow sometimes. Thanks.
Today I moved most of my baseball cards. I am definitely considering how it all works, going forward. I know I will keep the main Topps set each year at 9/page. But visual-appeal only sets (most inserts), and all minis, will go double, once I finally get those mini pages.
But if ever there was a set made to be filed away like this, it was Lineage. They could have just made double-sided picture cards for the amount of effort they put into those card-backs.
The other down side to doubling up is if you have missing cards, you have to slip the back card up to read the number, or take the front one out altogether to see the number on the back one.
Almost never use penny sleeves in sheets, though. They tend to wrinkle up. Only time I have is for the occasional 90's micros or other very small oddballs in my player collections. Putting them in a penny sleeve and stapling above the card keeps them from moving around.
When I started recollecting as an adult I went to one card per slot. I always thought that is the way it should have been I just couldn't afford it before. Then there came a day when I ran out of room and pages. You posted something along these same lines in 2010. I know it was 2010 because that binder is 2 per page now. So I thought maybe I can double up some junk wax era stuff and save some more room. So I started with 1980. Now as I need pages I rearrange cards to get the pages I need. I have made it all the way to 95. So as it sands my cards from 1909 (yes I keep cards from 1909 in pages to 1979 are one per page, 1980-1995 two per page, 1996-2009 one per page, and 2010-2012 are two per page. 20123 and 2014 get the box treatment. I haven't acquired enough to even put in a binder it has been 2 years of vintage for me. I do have enough 2014 Opening day to binder because of that package you sent me earlier in the year but no sense in starting a binder with only a 2014 Opening Day team set. Maybe after people send me all their Ginter Sox this year I'll have enough to start a binder.
And I want to brag about something. This years Ginter is the greatest year of Ginter yet. Know why? Not a single Red Sox from300-350. Yes no short print for this team collector to chase. Don't you wish Dodger fans were so lucky.
Pages with Red and Blue Headers? I don't recall seeing any of those. I do recall the side loading pages. Of course it depended on where you got your pages from and who their supplier was for whether the pages were side loaded or not. Sometimes it also depended on what sized pockets the pages were for the oddball sizes and larger vintage cards.
My question for the double baggers is this. What do you do if you put a set in pages and there is an error/variation? That's the only time I double bag.
If a card also has an error/variation, it just goes in the next pocket next to the base card.
The variations follow that flow, so (for example) in my 1969 book, Donn Clendenon shows up with the Astros and with the Expos.
Back then, I used side-loaded pages for my league leaders cards, and for my 1972 Team Caards (which I kept altogether). But the cards were always drifting out of the sideload pockets when I turned the pages, so I dumped them.
I do still have all my 1987-92 cards in their boxes, with only my 1952-81 cards (and football cards) in binders.
What I was referring to in my last comment above were the 8-pocket horizontal side-load pages.