This is my 21st card autographed by Ron Cey.
I don't really try to obtain Cey autographs anymore. I own most of his certified autographs and I'm just not down with the TTM ritual any longer.
If I still sent autograph requests through the mail I'd have to pay a fee now for a Cey signature. He used to hand them out for free and return them in record time. Paying a price wouldn't stop me if I was still into it. There are still plenty of cards that could use a Cey signature: 1974, 1979, 1981 and 1982 Topps, 1983 Donruss, 1982 and 1983 Fleer.
If a card company puts out a new Cey autograph, such as Topps' recent Archives Fan Favorites offerings in 2017 and 2018, I will look into obtaining those, and I have at times. But I'm pretty casual about it.
I'll also take a Cey autographed card that I don't own if someone sends it. The above card arrived from John (@gortexturban on Twitter). And I needed it.
But how many autographs of one individual player is too many?
I ask myself that question because, as I've said before, I'm good with a single autographed card of one individual player. If I get his signature, I get to say, "I HAVE HIS AUTOGRAPH!" and we're done. No need to get another one.
It's not like actual cards where I have accumulated dozens and dozens for each individual player. Autograph collecting is not set collecting, usually.
So what am I doing with Cey and all those autographs?
Well, he's my favorite player of all-time. He's also venturing up there. He'll be 73 in February. Who knows for how long new Cey autographs will show up?
So I'll take all that I can, even if I'm not all that fired up over it.
Those 21 Cey autographed cards join the more eclectic Cey autographs that I own. There's the personally autographed birthday card from 2019. And, of course, there's the lamp.
Haven't shown that for awhile.
So, really, I don't NEED any more new Cey autographs.
But I'll take any that folks send my way.
Cey joined a few more goodies in the envelope John sent.
He wondered whether this was a box bottom card, but 1977 Topps didn't have box bottoms. This is a blank back. I have a handful of blank back '77 Dodgers. It seemed to be a thing in the '77 set, although I didn't pull a single one when I was buying packs that year.
Some 1990s shiny of Hideo Nomo.
The one that scanned like most '90s shiny cards do, on the left, I own already. The one that scanned appropriately, the Museum Collection parallel, is new and awesome.
A couple of oddball needs. I'm pretty sure I've thrown this 1988 Starting Lineup Fernando in the dupes box about a half dozen times. But as of right now, I think I need it. It makes things difficult when a bunch of oddball brands out at that time used the same exact mug shot of Valenzuela.
Finally, yes! The king of non-sports stickers! A vintage Wacky Package!
This comes from the 7th Series issued in 1974 and those '73 and '74 stickers sit in the heart of the time period when I was buying those, along with my '75 and '76 baseball cards (Wacky Packages had a longer shelf life).
The product WP is parodying -- Marshmallow Fluff -- also speaks to that time in my childhood. As kids, we really wanted this stuff. I remember my mom buying it only once or twice and I wasn't really impressed with it once I tried it. But it was nice to see it in the kitchen cupboard!
I probably should land one of those Cey Archives Fan Favorites autographs on the occasion of his birthday next month just to get one from 1981 or 1982. I'm not crazy about the fact that they're encased, but I can just break out the little devil.
Thanks to all of those who feed my necessary need for Cey cards and my very unnecessary need for Cey autograph cards.
Comments
Official autographed cards of Barry Larkin are cards I will continue to chase though!
My favorite childhood lunch was "fluffernutter" sandwiches (peanut butter and marshmallow fluff). Occasionally, I added chocolate chips to them.
With that said, I don't think I even hit double digits on any single person's autograph. I think 6 is my current top, and I pulled at least 4 of them...maybe all 6, I can't remember. Luckily, it's a player from my favorite NBA team and one of my favorite players on that team so I am not unhappy about it.
I have zero interest in IP autographs that I didn't get myself. I don't generally trust them to be real, unless a friend got them specifically for me, which has happened. I've only ever done one TTM successfully, and 1 unsuccessfully. It's just not my thing.
Yes, it's a purchased frame. They sell them at Michael's, or similar craft-type stores.
But being a team collector I'd welcome any Brewers auto into my collection and also being a player collector I'd take any auto featuring any of the players I collect regardless of team.
That being said as far as picking up or searching out autos I usually allow myself the indulgence of one new Yount auto a year for my collection.
Not including duplicates I have 43 different Luis Torrens autographs (39 of which on cards with two on batting gloves, one on a ball and another on a 8x10). Oddly enough I never went nuts with getting Torrens to sign stuff for me too often during the few times I got to see him in person in 2014 and 2016, mainly because I was focusing more on getting stuff people almost never get signed like superfractors over 20 copies of the same base card. The rest are certifieds and I'm never going to turn any of those down if they're priced very cheaply.
as far as having too many autos of a single player...i say, too much is never enough! but i'm a hoarder as well.