Last Monday morning, I went to Costco and Target and it was a very quiet, uneventful trip. Little did I know that in the next few days, going to the store would become something like a cross between old Woody Woodpecker cartoons where the women kill each other, bridal day at Filene's Basement, and the Road Warrior. Lucky for me, I am a slight hoarder at all times and don't need soap, sanitizer, or toilet paper any time soon. Also, I did stop in the card aisle in Target and grabbed some Heritage packs (they had no blasters) and impulsively grabbed a blaster of Star Wars Skywalker Saga cards while looking in vain for Heritage blasters. This would prove very fortunate and unfortunate but not in the way I thought. Kind of like how most of our weeks went.
I rarely buy single retail packs of baseball cards because I find all you ever get are base cards and maybe an odd parallel but very rarely do you ever get something of substance. I figured since all I wanted was some examples of the Heritage, I would just grab 6 packs and go about my business. These might have been the luckiest six packs of retail cards I ever bought.
One thing I collect in totality is Topps rookie all stars. I love me some fancy trophies on my baseball cards and I got five of them in these six packs, including two short prints. The two short prints I got were Pete Alonso and Vlad Guerrero Jr., the two cards I figured I'd have to pay through the nose for on eBay if I ever wanted them, and here I got them in back to back retail packs.
I even got one of the two Alonso league leader cards and three of the postseason cards. And we are just getting started.
I got five inserts. That's practically one per pack but it didn't quite come out that way because I got two Tom Seaver Flashbacks stuck together in one pack. I also got another Flashbacks insert, Rod Carew, and two Then and Now cards - one of them also with Tom Seaver. Look him up, kids, he was pretty good. I did get one other base double in the five packs - it was Michael Conforto, a Mets player. This never happens. I always get doubles of San Diego Padres or Milwaukee Brewers.
There was one other Met and one other league leader card. Not too shabby.
I am pretty sure the 1971 set is in my top five all time designs and the Topps people really nailed the look of it. The colors, the lower case ee cummings style names, and the random action photos - which were new in '71 - are all here. Even the random rookie cards and odd position designations are here. I didn't scan the backs but the backs all look right with the head photos and esoteric write ups. They even have SSPs of the OPC backs, which are some of my favorite OPC variations. Alas, I did not get one of those.
I also love poses where the hitters are swinging and pointing the bat at your face, I got three of them in three different styles. I saw that the Alvarez/Aquino rookie card is hot. I am not one for hot rookies, so if anyone wants to trade for this thing, let me know.
This is the page I ended up piecing together from the five packs, I think it looks great.
I went with just about all posed shots but got a variety and the one action shot is decidedly inactive (I picked a Luke Voit action shot for the vertical example, that's on the back, the back I didn't scan). I chose a few teams that didn't exist in 1971 just for a little timely juxtaposition. I was thrilled with my choice to lower myself to retail packs. I know it will never turn out this good again. If anyone is putting the set together and has a wantlist, drop me a line and I'll see what I can fill before these go to ebay or Listia.
On the other hand, the Star Wars cards were...underwhelming. The blaster had 10 packs and 60 cards but no indication on the outside what they looked like; this seems to be on purpose. The design is very staid. I prefer a little color and whimsy in my Star Wars cards and all I got here is some stars from a NASA chart or something off of a Battlestar Galactica poster.
The photos and subjects seem to cover all eight movies, I assume this set was leading into the ninth. All the cards are vertical and none of the captions are puns or anything. I am falling asleep just looking at them.
I scanned a second group to continue the monotony. Not even Natalie Portman can make these more exciting.
Though I gotta say, I do love that middle card, it is a great shot from the climax of
the Force Awakens. Lightsabers and snow, more of that please. One out of 60 is a very bad ratio.
Each pack had a parallel base card where, oooo pinch me, they changed the color of the thrilling border to a rusty orange or a royal blue. I suppose the blue is a slight improvement but I got two of those and eight of the rusty orange.
Seriously, the write ups on the front and backs of these cards is more boring than my write up here.
Each pack also had an insert. These were at least a little more interesting, if slightly repetitive.
Five of them were from the Path of the Jedi set, which were almost
exactly the same as the style and substance of the base cards. I do like that Han Solo card because the highlight of the seventh movie to me was the fact that Harrison Ford didn't mail in his performance as he has in a few of the other movies he's done in his old age (I'm looking at you, Indiana Jones 4 and Blade Runner 2049). So that's 2 out of 60.
The blaster's special insert was a manu-patch and I got A Princess Leia. I actually have a use for that card so it is staying in my collection. I might cobble a page of these together but it will hardly find a place of honor in my Star Wars book.
That was the other Path of the Jedi card, which looks like the other one on the other page. The best looking card in the whole blaster was the advertisement card with that borderless shot from the first movie. If anyone wants to use that 10% off code, be my guest. It really had been an odd week indeed.
Showing posts with label Michael Conforto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Conforto. Show all posts
Sunday, March 15, 2020
Love In The Time of Corona.
Friday, July 3, 2015
Mail Call: Shiny!
I am a sucker for free shipping. Yes, I am the kind of buffoon who will buy extra stuff just to qualify for it. Like when COMC.com has one of their free shipping promotions there is usually a minimum number involved, but this really isn't a problem for me since I am pretty active buying and selling on their site. Well, this spring has thrown all sorts of curve balls and I just haven't been as card-centric as I normally am. So when I noticed they were having a free shipping for 30+ cards promotion a couple weeks ago, I was forlorn to see that I only had 6 cards waiting in my shipping queue. Do you think this deterred me? Did you read the first two sentences of the post?
I delved into my watch list but only saw high priced stuff for the most part. I did, however, notice two very reasonably priced inserts from last year's Bowman set. These inserts were not only Mets cards, they were shiny. Very shiny. I got swept up in the moment and decided it would be easiest to make a page of each of these inserts to qualify for my free shipping. Hey, a bargain is a bargain and shiny is shiny.
The first page is of the 1989 Bowman is Back inserts.
The scan does these no justice. They are glittery and atomic refractor-esque. They are like the Diamond Anniversary parallels from a 2011. I picked out 9 of the most interesting photos I could from the first page of the "lowest price" tab and voila!
The other page is from the Bowman Chrome Fire Die-Cut set.
I cannot express how much I like the concept behind this set. I like die cuts. I like shiny. I am a bit of a pyromaniac, at least I was in my youth when I almost burned my house down once by making a camp fire in the basement (gimme a break, I was like 8). I had not seen these in real life and it took me holding one to realize that they weren't just shiny and die cut, but the design itself was the base design, only melted. I am usually not one for prospect cards, but damn, I love this set. They are amazing. Once again, I picked 9 off the first page and now I am sorry I didn't build the whole set.
Keeping with the theme, I nabbed some Mets from those two sets, which were the cards I had watched in the first place. They were the Noah Syndergaard and Michael Conforto to be specific. I also got the David Wright and Gary Carter BiB and Travis d'Arnaud of both sets.
The bottom cards here are three of the six I had in my original queue. They are from an early 80's oddball Cramer set of vintage players in sepia tones. I chose players I don't have a lot of since the six I had were of the Hank Aaron/Willie Mays very-well represented type. Brief aside: I have an obsession with pie along the lines of Agent Cooper in Twin Peaks so it stuns me that I don't have a whole Pie Traynor page or player collection. That is a situation I might have to rectify.
Here are the other orphans from the original six.
Nothing very surprising here. A New Orleans Saint. A Mike Piazza. Another Michael Conforto card - and with the Mets quite literally scoring only 1 run a game for the last 2-3 weeks, I am bewildered as to why they haven't called him up, he's only hitting like .330. So I got my free shipping and it only cost me like ten bucks. My little buying binge left me with .42 cents credit left and while that is a very good number, I just couldn't leave that in there even though I had hit my magic number of 30. So one last check of my watch list showed me that the most inexpensive card I had was that Topps 60 Keith Hernandez. Price: 41 cents. I love it when a plan comes together.
I delved into my watch list but only saw high priced stuff for the most part. I did, however, notice two very reasonably priced inserts from last year's Bowman set. These inserts were not only Mets cards, they were shiny. Very shiny. I got swept up in the moment and decided it would be easiest to make a page of each of these inserts to qualify for my free shipping. Hey, a bargain is a bargain and shiny is shiny.
The first page is of the 1989 Bowman is Back inserts.
The scan does these no justice. They are glittery and atomic refractor-esque. They are like the Diamond Anniversary parallels from a 2011. I picked out 9 of the most interesting photos I could from the first page of the "lowest price" tab and voila!
The other page is from the Bowman Chrome Fire Die-Cut set.
I cannot express how much I like the concept behind this set. I like die cuts. I like shiny. I am a bit of a pyromaniac, at least I was in my youth when I almost burned my house down once by making a camp fire in the basement (gimme a break, I was like 8). I had not seen these in real life and it took me holding one to realize that they weren't just shiny and die cut, but the design itself was the base design, only melted. I am usually not one for prospect cards, but damn, I love this set. They are amazing. Once again, I picked 9 off the first page and now I am sorry I didn't build the whole set.
Keeping with the theme, I nabbed some Mets from those two sets, which were the cards I had watched in the first place. They were the Noah Syndergaard and Michael Conforto to be specific. I also got the David Wright and Gary Carter BiB and Travis d'Arnaud of both sets.
The bottom cards here are three of the six I had in my original queue. They are from an early 80's oddball Cramer set of vintage players in sepia tones. I chose players I don't have a lot of since the six I had were of the Hank Aaron/Willie Mays very-well represented type. Brief aside: I have an obsession with pie along the lines of Agent Cooper in Twin Peaks so it stuns me that I don't have a whole Pie Traynor page or player collection. That is a situation I might have to rectify.
Here are the other orphans from the original six.
Nothing very surprising here. A New Orleans Saint. A Mike Piazza. Another Michael Conforto card - and with the Mets quite literally scoring only 1 run a game for the last 2-3 weeks, I am bewildered as to why they haven't called him up, he's only hitting like .330. So I got my free shipping and it only cost me like ten bucks. My little buying binge left me with .42 cents credit left and while that is a very good number, I just couldn't leave that in there even though I had hit my magic number of 30. So one last check of my watch list showed me that the most inexpensive card I had was that Topps 60 Keith Hernandez. Price: 41 cents. I love it when a plan comes together.
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