I am a set collector at heart, by trade, to the core, however you want to phrase it. It is the style of collecting that makes the most sense to me. It is the kind of collecting that dominated the hobby through the '50s, '60s, '70s and into the '80s. It is how I grew up.
No other kind of collecting makes me feel more complete, more at one with the hobby, more invested, dedicated or exhilarated than set collecting. If I was told I had to limit my collection to one type of collecting, I wouldn't hesitate for a minute. Set completion would be the way to go.
The most logical set for me to complete is the Topps flagship set. It was basically the only thing you could complete from the time I was 9 years old until I was 15. And because I received that foundation, completing the main Topps set by going to the store and buying packs is the very definition of collecting for me. That IS card collecting to me. By all means, you can collect how and why you want, and you certainly don't need my permission. But everything else, every other kind of collecting, to me, is a spin-off, off-shoot or sequel -- there is only one original.
From where I come from, completing the Topps flagship set, specifically when you do it all in the year in which it was released, is the ultimate.
And it's quite possible I have just said goodbye to that kind of collecting.
Yeah, this is me being dramatic, again, but honestly, this how I see things at this point right now.
The card at the top of this post is from the 2015 Topps Update set. It is the last card I needed to complete that set and to own a complete Series 1, Series 2 and Update set from that flagship set (super shortprints excluded, of course). It is the last card I'm showing from my recent COMC order, and it could be the last card in a much bigger way. It's quite likely that I will point to it 10 years from now and say "that is the last card from the last current flagship set that I ever completed." Craig Kimbrel will be my sad hobby trivia answer.
I like 2015 Topps. I've said that few times. It is my favorite Topps flagship set since the 1980s. It would have to be for me to attempt to complete it. It's colorful, distinctive, memorable and quirky. The sonar set joins a host of other Topps flagship sets that I have completed: 1971, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 2006, 2009 and 2010.
It also gave me hope that I would want to complete modern sets, because after 2010, I wasn't all that inspired by what I saw from flagship. 2013 was nice, but 2015 restored my faith.
Then 2016 Topps arrived and dashed that faith along a smoke-filled rocky shore. Full bleed cards with name plates that half float in the air, extended from half-obscured team logos, and the whole thing covered in fog is not my idea of flagship. I get that card companies have to be different and innovative, if only to quiet the people who keep screaming at them YOU HAVE TO BE INNOVATIVE, but to me that's not the way to go about it.
But to Topps, obviously, somebody thinks, that IS the way to go. Because we've all seen what 2017 Topps is going to look like.
I will say that 2017 Topps looks better than 2016. And that is the very definition of damning with faint praise because I don't like it much. The 3-D straight edge ensemble at the bottom of each card with the name plate headed off into the horizon is ... different. The haze in the bottom right of each card is obviously for parallels and it's weird. But there's some strangeness that seems like it still needs work, as pointed out here:
But beyond that, it's nothing I want to collect. It's Stadium Club visiting flagship, and leaving a mess all over the place. I will always like some sort of border on flagship. Why is Stadium Club if you're going to use flagship to focus solely on photos?
It's another app friendly design that doesn't line up with how I collect. It's digital first, and if you know anything about newspapers and "digital first" you know what a wild, west show that is. There is nothing guaranteed about what Topps is doing.
But this is now year two of that digital-first trend. Which makes me wonder how long this is going to go on ... and whether there is an end in sight.
I get that people don't want to go back to what's been done before (although I saw today that Topps is trotting out 1987 Topps-themed inserts AGAIN). And I get that kids don't like crusty old cardboard. But there has to be a way to incorporate old-school designing in a new way, the traditional flagship look in a new way (P.S.: Design On Deck has some good examples on his blog).
I'm not seeing that in 2016 Topps and now 2017. And I'm certainly not collecting it. (It's entirely possible that two years from now I fall in love with a Topps flagship design, but the pattern here doesn't show that).
That's good news for my 1972 Topps set. And whatever other old sets I choose to complete now that there's nothing modern worth my while.
Congrats, 2015. You just may have been my fond farewell.
Comments
If it weren't for the damn stupid short prints, I'd consider trying to collect Heritage or Archives or something like that.
You and all the other set collectors are and if enough current card set collectors agree with you then Topps has a problem.
BTW...I think the 2017 set looks like something done by the ESPN graphics guy while stoned.
I seriously wonder how many people who buy flagship are actually kids sometimes. Or who really buys flagship at all anymore.
The design for next year's cards reminds me of 2013 without the border or simplistic charm.
It's starting to remind me of Ford Prefect's theory on why humans stated the blatantly obvious. Originally he thought if humans didn't exercise their lips, their mouths would seize.. He changed it to, if they stop exercising their lips, their brains start working.
In this case, rather than coming out with things collectors truly want, they're just churning out product after product in order to not have to put actual thought into what they're releasing..
I bought the 1981 Topps and Fleer factory sets in 1981, but as you say, that's more like "amassing" than "collecting".
Of course in those days we didn't have many choices.