So. I'd had some success at this particular Philly show. I'd brushed with some oddities, some cool stuff, but I wasn't convinced yet.
And I was already slightly discouraged. One of my heroes, Jim Thome, was signing at this show, and his auto prices were way out of my budget. Hearing 'okay, tickets 1 to 120 for Jim Thome' every so often did remind me what could have been. Of course, there's always other shows. A friend of my dad's was there, with a pennant from the 1980 World Series, looking to get Manny Trillo's signature for it, which would leave him with only 3 to go [I assumed he'd already gotten Pete Rose, who was at this show]. Of course, he had a well-paying job and right now I'm only freelancing. Things to look forward to.
Anyway, I soldiered on, looking for more low-price bins with some gold in them.
Dealer #3- Dimes of the Past
This table seemed to be a multi-generation team. The father handled the more traditional dime boxes and card show staples while the sons were working mojo sales and acquisitions. There were a bunch of dime boxes at this table, but some were out of reach, and this was my last table of the day before my hard out. So I just picked through what was there, and I still managed a great deal of stuff. On a lot of online card-buying sites, I don't like stealing the Ozzie Smiths, cause they're usually more sought after, so I've never gotten this 1995 Pinnacle one, in mid-backflip. Now I do.
This guy's stuff seemed to emphasize junk wax a bit more. Lots of 80s stuff in here, commons and all, and some 90s and early 2000s stuff. None of the recent stuff that littered the rest of these tables. This was sort of refreshing. Yes, some of this stuff can be a little on the nose at these, but you never know what'll pop up. For instance, these 90s inserts I've never been able to get most of, including a lot of early Dream Teams. And that Yount from 92 Fleer I'd seen on the blogs before, but needed to own.A surprising winner in this bin? Donruss Studio! Found a lot of Studio stuff lurking around here. I never even run into 96 Studio at all, it's very underrated.
I'm still looking for little inklings of the Stadium Club Members Only sets, which were cool if rare these days. These two, of Brett and Yount collecting their 3000th hits in 1992, are definitely worth it. An early indication of graphic editing prowess from Topps.
There was also a nice row or so of Yankees, which did benefit this specific Yankee collector. Another Members Only card, another Donruss Studio, and that very cool Hitters Inc subset from Score 96. Boggs' eyes just say 'i'm gonna have to ask you to exit the Dairy Queen'.
This box also had a TON of Bernie Williams. This isn't even all of them. For a Bernie collector like me, this was very good news. A lot of fun ones in here, like the sleeveless fit in 96 Score, the very thick 2001 Topps HD card, the realization that there is, in fact, a set called 2002 Upper Deck Ballpark Idols, and the random Soriano card I threw into this scan because I wasn't paying attention.
And then you had these ones from 2005 Fleer Tradition, commemorating several major league stints that had already concluded by the point of release. How had I never gotten that Alomar before? That is a cool one.
The king of this specific dime bin? Hideo Nomo, surprisingly. There were LOTS of Nomo cards. And, like Bernie, it appealed directly to the kind of weirdo who collects him. Like, I have tons of 2004 Skybox Autographics from my entry into the hobby, and somehow I didn't have this one yet.
ALL OF THESE were new to me. So many new Nomos. That 98 Pacific Online one of Nomo BATTING is insane. Heck, a couple of these were sets I glimpsed in Nachos Grande breaks that alerted me to the existence of these cards. So this was...something.
Hey, you know what these nickel bins had that I didn't think they would? Set needs. Maybe not a TON, but a few. This 67 McCovey reprint went towards the Cards Your Mother Threw Out set that I keep remembering I'm collecting.
Not just Topps inserts. Inserts from all over. An Edwin Diaz insert from 2019 Finest that looks super cool. A Lindor insert from 2020 Optic that's well designed. Five cents! Sure!
And more recent Topps reprint inserts. Again, Adam Jones' Arizona tenure is fun to see on cards, and it's nice to find a cheap Expos Raines, too.
Both of these, in my opinion, should have been priced higher. As good as Machado is, only 3 bucks for a bat card? And Konerko's a hero in Chicago. Heck of a swatch, too. But no matter, these were very nice finds.
Like last time, not many autos, but I did find a rare depiction of Corey Dickerson as a Philadelphia Phillie, on a very cool on-card auto. Fits my niche perfectly.
Your the 2nd blogger I've read who had a great time at this show. Congrats on getting a ton of nice pickups!
ReplyDelete