I hope people had a good 4th of July yesterday. I have aged out of the water park/fireworks spectaculars that were part of my life 15-20 years ago. All there is to do these days -- if I don't want to drive out to whatever crowded area is hosting fireworks -- is hunker down at home and calm the pet. And play with baseball cards, of course -- always a perk when you don't have to go anywhere. I've wrapped up another team binders update but there are always team-binder determinations happening in my collection. My recent sportlots order included this 1993 Upper Deck Then & Now Darryl Strawberry insert. I've liked this particular insert for a long time and pick one up every once in awhile, with showing them off on my 1993 Upper Deck blog when the time comes now part of the plan (That won't be until 500-plus more cards have been posted, and with the way nobody pays attention to set blogs anymore, who knows if I'll ever get there). When you update these c...
Ever since I was a kid I've been about the "more" of cards. I have always liked "more cards" over "less cards." This probably has to do with not having a lot when I was a kid. I had old-school parents who thought kids should earn things through something called an allowance. I didn't have much money, and there was nobody around to just give me stuff unless my grandma made a visit or it was my birthday. Even then nobody was gifting me a complete set. So when I finally started working and receiving a paycheck, well, adding as many cards as I could seemed like a great idea. Add the fact that I come from the set-building generation -- what's the point of getting cards if they're not going toward a set? -- and more is the way to go. Those sets are at least 660 cards strong and filled with commons. So through decades of following the "more mantra," I have added binders upon binders of cards and boxes upon boxes. You've se...