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A sucker for easy trades

  
Trading cards takes a lot of time. Also, sometimes it takes a lot of work.
 
Everyone collects differently and sometimes it's difficult to match up with another collector. That happens all the time. No big deal really. Then there are the fellow collectors that drag out trades for too damn long.
 
I never participated in collectors forums, but I've heard that trades were often like that there. I have no problem trading away nice cards, but I'm not going to send a couple dozen messages back and forth to come to an agreement on an exact accounting of precise compensation. I've dealt with this in the past with a couple bloggers. It's not fun. Trading is supposed to be fun.
 
That's why I gravitate to super simple trades. My favorite are: "I'll send you some cards whenever and you send some cards whenever." That's how most trades go on the blogs. It's about the only ones I make these days.
 
It's also why I participate in stuff like Diamond Jesters' Time Travel Trading. It couldn't be any easier. Find a card you like, find a corresponding card in your collection that is older than the one you want, make the trade. I've made dozens upon dozens of Time Travel trades because it's so easy.
 
 

This time I selected some heavyweights from the 1985 Topps football set. Look at the tiny way the set recognized All-Pros. Certainly not the 1970's treatment! But then how many big, bold looks do you need on the '85 football set?
 
 

Two 1960s cards but they arrived in different ways. The 1961 Pete Runnels came the traditional way. The 1968 Turk Farrell was a "Trapped In Time" selection, one of those cards that has waited four years for someone to select it. Farrell may be hatless and bordered by the '68 design but I had to claim him.
 
 

But this is my favorite pick-up. It's a 1982 Fleer stamp of Steve Garvey. I recall when these came out in 1982 and shunning them when I saw them for sale. Stamps??? That's not even a sticker!!
 
I dismissed these for years, not even bothering with the Dodgers. Now it's 40-plus years later and I wish I hadn't waited so long to add them.
 
So that's one easy trade down and here's another one from an old friend from the old blog days.
 
 

This is the creation of gritz, who ran the blog Project '62. He was always doing card art projects (still is, obviously), creating baseball card mosaics and things.
 
He recently made some artwork of some classic cards from my era ('70s and '80s) and put them all together with a mosaic for this foldout panel. If you know the '70s and '80s, you know the Topps card, the 1981 Al Hrabosky, 1972 Dock Ellis, 1978 Glenn Burke and 1977 Mark Fidrych. They appear on both the front and the back of the panel.
 
 

A look at the innards. There you see the 1965 Topps Bob Uecker mosiac. Just great work. Still don't know how he does it.
 
So, of course, the cards are meant to be cut up, just like a Hostess panel! So I did.
 

There they are, some brand new customs for my customs binder! And each of them has an individual "transfers ad" on the back, as you saw in the previous pic.
 
That is if you cut wisely because if you didn't, you would have cut up the Uecker mosiac.
 
 

I was careful. This beauty is 5x7 and I have just the page to store it. Really genius how this was created so I can have the individual cards as cards and also as a panel on the back (or front) of the Uecker pic.
 
All I had to do was send a couple of beat-up vintage cards for this, that is all he wanted. And he sent a couple of key cards along with his custom work. 
 
 

Man, this card (pinch hitter!!!!!). I've owned the 1987 Nestle Jackie Robinson card from the early days of the blog and have picked up seconds and thirds of it over the years. But until this package arrived I had never seen the Snider -- the only other Dodger in the set -- until that point. 
 
 

I don't have hardly anything from the 1954 Topps set that isn't a Dodger. But this is a legendary card (one I wrote about in a Beckett article recently). I don't care about the creases, it's a '50s card, it should look like it's that old.
 
The back of this card is almost as fascinating as the front.
 
 
And that was two very easy trades. All I gave up were a few duplicates. And nobody was checking off a ledger making sure they got "their share" and that it was no less than what I received. 
 
I was very lucky to find the card blog world and this kind of trading, I don't even want to think what it'd be like if I grew up on the forums or in the world of grading or peddling rookies or any of that stuff. This is much more my speed.

Comments

Bo said…
Some great pickups there! Those Nestle's are not easy to come by.
bryan was here said…
Those art cards are way cool. And I love the Bob Uecker mosaic.
Old Cards said…
The 60's cards are very nice. The Uecker mosaic is interesting!
Nick Vossbrink said…
Totally in agreement with you about the easy trades. I've had a couple get caught up in matching trade value and while I understand the desire for "fairness" I also know that spending all my time "pricing" my duplicates/bycatch is exactly the kind of thing that makes me want to dump the entire hobby and walk away.
Fuji said…
That Uecker custom is really cool. Love the O'Brien brothers card too. Very iconic card.
Brett Alan said…
I knew of that O'Brien brothers card. What I did not know until just now is that John O'Brien is the grandfather of current Cardinals pitcher Riley O'Brien!
Jafronius said…
Nice cards, and the Uecker mosaic is awesome! I've always wanted to try the time travel trades out but I'm still way too disorganized to find stuff. Maybe one day.
AdamE said…
I dis same trading on the forums long ago probably 97 or 98. Most of it was little stuff, 2 or three cards for a specific card and it probably took only 2 or 3 messages for it to fall into place. I did come up with a trade partner that I could just send stuff to whenever and he would respond with a whenever package in return. He collected Eric Rhett and my LCS gave them to me for free so I would randomly send them to him whenever and he would mail me something in return. We were probably 8 trades in when I just never got a package back and never heard from him again.

I did one big trade on the forums. I traded a 1996 Select Certified Mirror Blue Emmitt Smith for a slew of Marino cards. ( I PCed Marino back then. It was an agenizing back and forth but not so much the back and forth it was that my Emmitt "booked" for $750.00 and I had to mail the thing off with no guarantee that I would get anything in return. The trade come off just fine though in the end. I still have all those Marino cards in a box I haven't even looked at them in years.
Matt said…
The simplicity is a big reason why the Time Travel trading project has done as well as it has. I don't think I would have had quite the success if I had to worry about what I'm getting in return!