Last Sunday I went over to Kansas City for the bi-monthly [that's every two months, not every two weeks for those keeping score at home] card how at the Hampton Inn there. There's always one booth that doesn't really have any recent cards and instead focus on vintage collectibles like old pennants, programs, and odd balls. They had this great box from 1968 Topps which highlights that you get one Topps playing card inserted into each pack. Neat, but $150 is crazy considering there are "pen markings."
And here it is completely unfolded. Anyone else out there collect wrappers? Do you store them unfolded or folded? I'm an unfolded man myself.
Along those lines, I did find something else to spend my money on. How about a 1973 Topps wrapper?
This is by far the oldest wrapper I have in my modest wrapper collection.
Comments
I think my oldest is only 1978 Topps. I just acquired that one in a trade.
http://baseballdad-mytribeblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/wrappers-from-crinkly-wrappers.html
One time when I bought a non-sport set from ebay the seller included the wrapper for the set and they had it folded. That gave me an idea and I have done it on a few occasions. I use either one of those blanks (dummies, waste of cardboard etc) or I used to use a worthless example from the set and re-wrap the wrapper around that, then carefully place it in a penny sleeve (again the modern foil wrappers don't cooperate with this technique) and if storing in a box put that in front of the set, or if in a binder put it in the first pocket, or put the unfolded "flat" wrapper in one of those full sheets (like the office supply stores sell for keeping documents all nice and clean in binders) at the beginning or end of the set.
a few years ago (ACK it was 5 years ago) I wrote about this on Ebay as a guide http://reviews.ebay.com/Storing-TRADING-CARD-WRAPPERS-Three-Techniques?ugid=10000000002794210
It babbles on a lot, but I think some of the general idea gets across.