Rejected titles for this, um, post:
Past Posting.
Post Haste.
Post Tense.
Post Modern.
The Post With The Most.
If You Come To a Post In The Road, Take It.
Okay, that last one is a little bonkers, but still. Anyway, one of the most viewed entries in this blog was my dissertation on miscut cards, which itself was an off-shoot of a posting by Night Owl about the dangers and misadventures of cutting vintage cards off of boxes. My love of oddball food issues has been pretty well documented on this blog. What is just inexcusable on my part is that until this week, I did not own complete pages of the classic 1960's Post cards; all I had was a single example of each year hiding in the back of my retired players binder. I am not sure what came over me, but I decided to remedy that woeful situation and bought lots of each year from the same seller (saves shipping after all). These are the pages that came from that eBay buying spree.
1961:
The Jim Coates was the original card I had, the other eight are what I selected from a very eclectic lot. Names like Marvelous Marv and Vinger Bend come to mind when looking at these, not to mention that Moon Shots, while impressive, are the second thing one thinks of when looking at Wally Moon - especially when looking at him. Coming off cereal boxes, the backs of these cards are boring. but someone tried to make this one at least a little cooler. If I was a kid with a blank back, those ruboff tattoos or stickers would definitely have found their way to the vast landscape of empty cardboard.
1962:
Post adds a little more color and a logo to the fronts of these but keeps the basic design the same. In fact, given that they were using only one side of the card, this is really the most efficient design you could ask for. You get a sturdy photo, a line of yearly and career stats, and a nice write up about the player. You would be hard pressed to come up with a better one. The Felipe Alou was the original card I had, the others chosen to fill out the page were either great names (Bubba! Blasengame!) or due to their sparsity in my collection. I really should have more Don Zimmer and Bob Allison cards.
1963:
The design sticks to the basics of the last two, with a tip of the cap towards the 1961. I have no idea if all these cards were owned and trimmed by the same kid or not but I must say, he did not get better with age. Maybe he had the bad habit of eating his cereal while trying to cut the cards off the box. The original card here was the Drysdale, which was altruistically donated by the aforementioned Night Owl after he posted about his Post cards. I must say, Post did like to get players posed with a bat on their shoulder. I actually had to pick and choose to keep the whole page from being nothing but players with lumber on their deltoids. 1963 was a pretty good year to be a kid and a baseball card collector as you had the Post cards, the seminal Topps set, and the first Fleer set with modern players.
Sadly, for some reason, Post stopped putting baseball cards on their cereal boxes and wouldn't make another set for 27 years. We would have to eat Frosted Flakes and Twinkies in the 1970's and Drakes Cakes in the 1980's to fill the void. I might have to start picking up some of those to make complete pages of them next. If I am gonna be an oddball food issue collector, I better be willing to go all the way.
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