I have no idea how to create pages but I'll figure it out eventually godammit

Showing posts with label Allen Ginter Type Set. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allen Ginter Type Set. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2023

BLACK FRIDAY COMC PICKUPS - PART 13: KITTY

HERE'S A FUCKING BIG ONE

I DON'T THINK I'VE PUT A DENT IN THIS PROJECT FOR FIFTEEN YEARS AT LEAST

N25 1888 ALLEN & GINTER WILD ANIMALS OF THE WORLD


EARLY IN THE DAYS OF THIS BLOG I WAS OBSESSED WITH ALLEN & GINTER CARDS. I REALIZED I COULD BUY ACTUAL VINTAGE ALLEN & GINTER CARDS ON EBAY AND YAHOO AUCTIONS (remember them?) FOR SUPER CHEAP AND ATTEMPTED TO BUILD A TYPE SET OF THE ANTIQUE MINI CARDS. YOU CAN SEE MY PROGRESS OVER ON THE SIDEBAR ALTHOUGH I GOT LAZY AND NEVER MADE POSTS FOR A LOT OF THE CARDS. I GOT VERY CLOSE TO COMPLETING THE SET BUT THE LAST THREE CARDS I NEEDED WERE FROM SCARCE ISSUES AND THEN YAHOO AUCTIONS SHUT DOWN AND EBAY GOT SHITTY ABOUT PAYMENTS SO I QUIT BUYING CARDS ONLINE FOR A WHILE. NO MOAR CHEAP OLD NON-SPORTS CARDS FOR ME. THEN I SLOOOOOWLY STARTED PICKING UP STUFF ON COMC AND REALIZED THAT THERE IS ALSO A BUNCH OF COOL OLD NON-SPORTS CARDS THERE AS WELL. NOT THE FIREHOSE OF NEW STUFF LIKE ON EBAY BUT IT'S THERE AND THERE'S A LOT OF NEAT STUFF AVAILABLE FOR A BOTTOM FEEDER LIKE ME. SINCE I STARTED MY BLACK FRIDAY BUYS I'VE BEEN PEEKING AT THE GINTERS AND FOUND ONE I NEEDED LAST YEAR


THIS ONE IS FROM THE WILD ANIMALS OF THE WORLD SET FROM 1888. THERE ARE A BUNCH OF ANIMAL-THEMED SETS IN ALLEN & GINTER'S NON-SPORTS RUN, THE GIMMICK WITH THIS ONE IS EACH ANIMAL IS SHOWN JUST IN A PORTRAIT WITH A VERY EXPRESSIVE FACE. MY WILDCAT HERE SEEMS VERY SURPRISED BY SOMETHING. IT'S A GREAT LOOKING SET AND WOULD BE A TOP CHOICE FOR ME TO COLLECT THE SET IF THAT LOTTERY WIN EVER HAPPENS. THE MET ALSO HAS SOME NICE PICTURES OF THE BURDICK COLLECTION IF YOU'RE WILLING TO DIG FOR THEM. THIS CARD WAS NOT VERY EXPENSIVE AT ALL, BUT FOR SOME REASON MY 2021 ORDER IS COMPLETELY MISSING FROM COMC SO I COULDN'T TELL YOU THE EXACT PRICE. I'M GUESSING ABOUT 5-6 BUCKS. I GOT LUCKY THAT I FOUND A VINTAGE KITTY CAT SO CHEAP, YOU'LL BE SEEING A FEW MORE COOL CATS IN THESE BLACK FRIDAY POSTS

I'M NOT REALLY SURE WHY THIS IS ONE OF THE LAST CARDS I NEEDED AS IT DOESN'T SEEM TO BE OVERLY RARE IN COMPARISON TO OTHER VINTAGE GINTER CARDS. THE LAST TWO I NEED ARE DEFINITELY SCARCE THOUGH. THE N17 NAVAL FLAGS ARE WAY HARDER TO FIND THAN THE OTHER TWO SET OF FLAGS ALLEN & GINTER PUT OUT, POSSIBLY BECAUSE IT'S MADE UP OF ODDBALL FLAGS AND ADMIRALS THAT MIGHT NOT HAVE BEEN AS WIDELY COLLECTED, EXCEPT FOR THE GROVER CLEVELAND CARD WHICH IS PRICEY. THEN THERE IS THE 1890 N23 SET OF SONG BIRDS WHICH IS LEGITIMATELY SCARCE AS IT IS ONE OF THE LAST SETS RELEASED BY GINTER BEFORE THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY MERGER THAT KILLED OFF THE NEED TO INSERT PROMOTIONAL ITEMS IN CIGARETTE PACKS AT ALL. THAT SET WAS A PARTICULAR PROBLEM AS I REALLY WANTED THE BROWN THRASHER CARD FOR MY COLLECTION BEFORE THE NHL RIPPED OUT MY HEART FOR THE SECOND AND FINAL TIME. I CAN GET ONE NOW FOR NOT TOO MUCH MONEY EXCEPT THAT ONE OF THE RULES OF THIS SET BUILD IS I DON'T PAY MORE THAN $20 FOR ANY CARD AND I DON'T USE EBAY ANY MORE. SO NO THRASHERS FOR ME

Sunday, December 13, 2020

THE TWELVE DAYS OF DRAFTSMAS - DAY ONE - FETTY BITE WHIT TUCK

HAI BISHES I'M BACK JUST IN TIME FOR XMAS

SPEAKING OF CRISMISS BAH HUMBUG



I'VE BEEN BUSY WITH SOME EXISTENTIAL CRISESES OVER THE PAST FEW MONTHS AND HAVEN'T WRITTEN SHIT OR DONE ANYTHING CREATIVE OR PRODUCTIVE OR USEFUL FOR THAT MATTER-

OH SHIT I FORGOT I POSTED A BUNCH OF THOSE DIME CARDS I GOT ON TWITTER HERE'S THE GINORMOUS THREAD OF 'EM IF YOU WANT TO TAKE A LOOK

BACK TO THE POST

-BUT I DIDN'T WANT TO PUNT ON MY CHRISTMAS TRADITION OF KNOCKING OUT 12 STRAIGHT EXTREMELY DIFFICULT POSTS IN LESS THAN TWO WEEKS. I ALSO WANT TO BE LAZY AS FUCK AND PUT VERY LITTLE EFFORT INTO IT. THEN I LOOKED AT MY DRAFT FOLDER AND SAW DOZENS OF POSTS I ALREADY STARTED THEN ABANDONED AND THOUGHT, HEY, LET'S JUST FINISH THESE SHITS UP AND CALL IT A HOLIDAY SEASON. HERE'S THE FIRST DAY OF HOLIDAY CHEER

The Allen Ginter Project: Card #1 and 1a - N30 The World's Decorations

HERE'S THE ORIGINAL TITLE OF THE POST. I WILL CONTINUE TO LIST THESE IN BOLD SO YOU CAN SEE MY THOUGHT PROCESS ALL THOSE YEARS AGO. HERE IS THE DATE OF THE ORIGINAL DRAFT:

12/07/2007

I'VE BEEN LAZY FOR A LONG TIME FOLKS. THIS IS NOT THE VERY FIRST DRAFT WITH PICS I ABANDONED BUT IT'S THE FIRST ONE I KNEW WHAT TO DO WITH

I've posted this card before as a teaser, but here it is again, the very first Allen & Ginter card I ever got.

TEXT I WROTE BACK THEN WILL BE NORMALLY CAPITALIZED TO DISTINGUISH IT FROM THE CAPSLOCK LUNACY I EMBRACED ONCE MY BRAIN BROKE. I DIDN'T WRITE MUCH FOR THIS ONE
 
THIS IS APPARENTLY THE FIRST VINTAGE GINTER CARD I PURCHASED WAY BACK WHEN ONCE I REALIZED THAT 1800'S CARDS OF RANDOM NONSENSE ARE WAY WAY WAAAAAAY LESS EXPENSIVE THAN 1800'S CARDS OF BAESBAWL PLAYERS. IT IS A VERY PRETTY CARD WITH FLOWERS AND RIBBONS AND FLOURISHY GILDED CROWNS AND STARS AND SUCH

I JUST SPENT FIVE MINUTES TRYING TO GET THIS PARAGRAPH LEFT ALIGNED AND I'M RECONCIDERING THE WHOLE PROJECT SO FUCK IT CENTER ALIGNED IT IS

THE BACKS ARE GORGEOUS AS WELL AND HAVE A TINY IMAGE OF THE OLD PLANTER ON THEM AND I NOW REGRET SPENDING EVEN A DIME ON ALL THAT BULLSHIT THAT CAME OUT IN 2007-2009. NEVER BUY NEW CARDS, KIDDOS. ONLY BUY THE OLD CRAP NO ONE ELSE WANTS. I DID SOMEHOW ACQUIRE A SECOND CARD FROM THIS SET ALTHOUGH I'M NOT 100% SURE HOW


BY NOW YOU SHOULD SEE WHERE I WAS GOING WITH THIS WHAT WITH ONE CARD BEING THE IMPERIAL ORDER OF THE ROSE AND THE OTHER BEING THE ORDER OF ST. OLAF NORWAY. THIS WAS GINNING UP TO BE A BETTY WHITE POST. I FOUND A BUNCH OF VIDEOS AND PICS TO GO WITH IT AND HERE THEY ARE ASSUMING THEY STILL EXIST

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fBpB2VoNdWU

FUCK


HOLY SHIT THIS ONE SILL EXISTS AND EVEN MENTIONS THE FESTIVAL OF THE DANCING VIRGINS IN ST. OLAF


OH GOD THIS ONE SHOULD HAVE BEEN DELETED BY THE CONTENT MATCH BOTS. IF YOU DON'T GET THE PUNCHLINE JUST THANK THE LORD AND DON'T GOOGLE IT. THE LOOKS ON BLANCHE AND DOROTHY'S FACES ARE ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW

I THINK ONE OF THE REASONS I NEVER POSTED THIS IS IN MY RESEACH I DUG TOO DEEPLY AND FOUND AN ALLEGED TOPLESS PHOTO OF PRE-TELEVISION BETTY AND THOUGHT ABOUT POSTING IT FOR ABOUT FIVE MINUTES BEFORE I REALIZED WHAT A TERRIBLE IDEA THAT WOULD BE AND JUST BACKED AWAY SLOWLY. 

IN LIEU OF WORLD WAR TWO ERA PINUPS HERE IS THE GAME GRUMPS DOING A BIT IN THEIR BLOODBORNE PLAYTHROUGH WHERE THEY LIST OFF A BUNCH OF BAND NAMES FROM THE NEW ORLEANS CREEPYFEST MUSIC FESTIVAL

I HAVE NO IDEA IF BLOGGER EMBEDDED THE VIDEO AT THE RIGHT TIME AND I TRIED TWICE SO JUST GO TO 11:50 IF IT DID NOT


AND IF YOU WANT TO HEAR THE BAND THEMSELVES AND DON'T MIND SEEING A COMEDY DILDO WELL HERE YOU GO


DOUBLE FUCK. JUST GOOGLE THE BAND

EVEN THOUGH YOU ALREADY SAW IT AT THE TOP OF THE POST I ACTUALLY COMPLETELY FORGOT ABOUT THE TREE TO HANG ORNAMENTS ON WHEN I GOT ALL THE POSTS TOGETHER BUT I FOUND AN APPROPRIATE ONE AND GOT IT MSPAINTED AT 12:59 AM LAST NIGHT


HOLLY JOLLIES MICKEYFICKEYS

Sunday, June 1, 2014

Joy of a Completed Page: Allen & Ginter Type Set

You guys pushed me over one million page views (by Google's count, anyways) and I haven't posted in a month and a half and I kinda feel bad. It's not that I don't love ya, it's just that I don't care right now. Here's something nice to make it up to you all. Completed page of an Allen & Ginter original type set, N1-N15. Enjoy.



Card list for reference:

N1 - American Editors: William N. Singerly
N2 - American Indian Chiefs: Cayatanita
N3 - Arms of all Nations: Revolver
N4 -  Birds of America: Osprey
N5 - Birds of the World: Great Bird of Paradise
N6 - City Flags: London
N7 - Fans of the Period: No 44
N8 - Fish from American Waters: Red Snapper
N9 - Flags of all Nations First Series: Liberia
N10 - Flags of all Nations Second Series: Tripoli
N11 - Flags of the States and Territories: Georgia
N12 - Fruits: Sour Sop
N13 - Game Birds: Wild Turkey
N14 - General Government and State Capitol Buildings of the United States: Treasury Building, Washington
N15 - Great Generals: Wellington

If I ever complete the second page of the type sett, I'll be sure to show it off.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

The Allen Ginter Project : Card #29 - N32 The World's Racers

Last night I was having major motivational problems. Wednesdays are now essentially Fridays for me now with the added bonus of getting to chase kids all weekend. So to say I was not really interested in doing anything productive after a week of work is an understatement. I stared at an unfinished vintage post for quite a long time before giving up and watching some science program on PBS. I came back to the post after enriching my mind and still drew a blank. Speaking of drawing, meh. No sketch cards were created last night. No art of any kind was created unless ponies hastily scribbled counts. It was Merry Archivesmas on the blogs and Twitter, and honestly the set does nothing for me. Short prints in Archives? T'ain't natural. So last night was pretty crummy all around. UNTIL....

Failing in my attempt to write a post languishing in my draft folder since January, I decided to plumb the depths of my abandoned posts and found an interesting one from 4/14/09. Yep, over 3 years ago. Remember when I was trying to complete a type set of original Allen & Ginter cards but got down to a few scarce cards and then quit eBay because they were shoving PayPal up our butts, thus eliminating the only place I ever found original Allen & Ginter cards and stymieing my quest even though it didn't matter anyway since I was unemployed and broke? No, you don't. Not even people who were reading the blog regularly in 2009 remembers that. Hell, I barely remember that. Anyway, I found an interesting post from 2009. Guess what?

PONIES.

THAT'S WHAT.


I'm slowly but surely realizing that my unnatural pony obsession has far deeper roots than I originally thought. Here's a card from 1890 featuring the racehorse Tristan. The card was inserted in Kinney Bros. Cigarettes, a company best known for their Sweet Caporal brand. Kinney had three horse racing sets in 1890: N229 Famous Running Horses (American), N230 Famous Running Horses (British) and N231 Great American Trotters. Tristan here's a Brit from the N230 set.


25 little ponies gets you one big fat 8 X 10 cabinet card of a full fledged horse. Horse racing was a very popular pastime in the late 19th century and there were a handful of trading card sets produced at the time. Including...


Allen & Ginter's N32 The World's Racers set featured 50 famous racehorces. There was no larger sized 2 7/8 x 3 1/4 inch version of the set as is the case with several A&G sets, but there is an album (A18) full of champion ponies. As usual, Allen & Ginter have some of the nicest lithography on their cards. Sadly this card is slightly spoiled by one of the most unfortunately placed stains in the history of carddom. If you don't see it, I'm not pointing it out.


The Kinney and A&G checklists overlap quite a bit, but Kingmate and Tristan are unique to their sets. Might be unique, period. The other two big two Tobacco card manufacturers, Duke and Goodwin had their own equine inserts, but Duke focused on breeds of horses instead of racers and Goodwin's set is so scarce I can't find a checklist. To this day I can't find a damn thing about Kingmate online, but Mad Guru e-mailed me a nice bio on Tristan a looooooong time ago. Belated thanks to Mad Guru for a cap to this very belated post.

And now here's some obligatory pony music for a post about perfect stallions.



Hey, I didn't force you to click play, did I?

Saturday, July 24, 2010

The Allen Ginter Project : Card #30 - N21 Quadrupeds

BADGER



BADGER


BADGER


BADGER






Needed something silly for a Saturday. This one has what is probably my favorite title text of all the A&G sets. Something about that Q50 gets me. Pretty decent art on the front too. Not sure if the mighty badger made it into this year's National Animals set, but if Topps uses the idea again for the states we've got a candidate for Wisconsin right here.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

The people have spoken

Somewhat apathetically and split right down the middle, but spoken they have. As a result, I'm finally going to finish off the posts for my Allen & Ginter Type Set now that I have the time. If you're not familiar with this project, basically in 2007 I realized that you could buy individual vintage Allen & Ginter cards from the 1880s for less than the cost of a 2007 Blaster. Often you could find them for less than the price of a pack! So I stopped buying blasters (the set was mostly complete anyway) and I started buying vintage. My goal was to get one type card from each of the 34 original Allen & Ginter tobacco card sized sets. A few months into 2008 I was down to only needing three cards to complete the set when the supply of vintage A&G cards started declining on eBay. Long story short, I kept losing out on bids,'08 A&G came out, the economy turned suck so I stopped eBaying and I put the project on the back burner.

It's time to finish it off though. I've got ten sets left to post about, four of which can be previewed here. There's also three that I scanned and posted below and three that I don't actually have yet (N17, N23 and N25 if anyone has a pile of 'em lying around). If I can't find them dirt cheap, I'll just post a review of the set itself. So, for the forseeable future, you'll be seeing a lot of Chippers, Lemmers, Ginters, Numbers, 09 Heritage and assorted weirdness. If you're all very good I might even do a box break of a certain horizontally-oriented retro product. If you have a particular A&G card you want to hear about first, pester me in the comments.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Card Of the Week 7/28/08

Pretty much everyone who hasn't just completely given up on Topps altogether has either ripped some Allen & Ginter, is waiting for their box of Allen & Ginter to ship or has wistfully followed some Allen & Ginter breaks online since they have been forced to squander their money on foolish things like gas and food. And most of those people ripping or watching have had this question pop up in their mind at one point while looking through the cards.

"Who the heck is this old geezer on the Crack the Code advertisement cards?"

And he hasn't just been on the Crack the Code Cards either. He's also on the side of the box,

And the inside flap of the box,

And the security seal that keeps the box safe from evildoers,

And on the blaster boxes,

And on the wrappers,
N43 wrappers too,
Don't forget the cards themselves,

And last but not least, here he is blowing bubbles.

Kurt Bevacqua he ain't. But who is this guy to make him so ubiquitous in this set. This is a Topps product, you'd think they'd plaster Mickey Mantle's face everywhere. Well, you have to go back to the original 1887 Allen and Ginter sets to find out. This guy (I thought it was Annie Oakley the first time I saw it on the back of a Topps mini card) is none other than...

OLD PLANTER

Oh great, that explains everything. Now who the hell is Old Planter? Well, first off he's a card in the Allen & Ginter N33 "World's Smokers" set from 1888. The subjects of this set use the common 'people around the world wearing their crazy costumes' motif that is very common in 19th century sets, but A&G kicked it up a notch by having them all smoking cigarettes and pipes filled with (presumably) Allen & Ginter tobacco. It's a very well done set that doesn't go completely overboard with the stereotypes and many of the other sets from that period do. There are many smokers wearing costumes from around the world as well as a historical subject or two. It can be educational too, did you know an Odalesque was the slave of a concubine? I didn't until I saw the card from that set and looked it up, and I had even seen all those paintings of nekkid ladies in the Wikipedia article already in art history class. The most popular card from the set though (and my favorite) is the Old Planter. Why Old Planter? He was the de facto mascot for their tobacco products. Who knows, it might even be a humourous take on founder John Allen himself. It sure ain't Lewis Ginter, that's for sure. Allen & Ginter was the first company to plaster his mug all over their products before Topps decided to do so. As you can see, they used his likeness...

On their cigarette packs,

On their tins of loose tobacco,
On the coupons inserted into each pack of cigarettes,



That could be exchanged for premium albums of their cards,

Yep, he's on them too...


On the Cabinet sized advertising cards,

And of course, on the back of the cards themselves.

See, there he is!
So Topps is actually being very true to the original A&G cards by putting Old Planter - sans cigarette so as not to offend modern sensibilities - all over everything. This particular Old Planter card is my favorite (heck, he's even up in my title pic) old style Allen & Ginter card not for his notoriety, but for the back of the card. Check it out:

Somebody completely ruined the PSA grade of this card by stamping "THIS BELONG TO JOE K. DUCK" on the back. Most collectors would bemoan their PSA 4 or 5 dropping to a 1 due to some guy with an ink pad and a stamp marking his territory, but this stamp is the reason this card is special to me. When I first became fascinated by these cards I scoured the web for info and found a lot of it from eBay auctions. One seller that I learned a lot from was As Time Goes By. They sell a lot of old non-sports cards (including some primo Mars Attacks cards up for sale right now) and this time last year they were selling off a large collection of 19th century cards they had acquired. Looking through the listing descriptions taught me enough information about these strange old cards that I was able to find more information on them using their ACC numbers, manufacturers, approximate release dates and set names. There were also hundreds of great scans of these cards that I had never seen before. I would save a lot of these scans for future reference including the coupons, packs and album pictures up above. There's not a heck of a lot of resources on trading cards out there, especially the obscure ones and auction site scans are often the only information available on some of this old stuff. Quite a few of the scans from As Time Goes By had the Joe K. Duck stamps on the back. This dude had a lot of cards that he inked up.

I felt an affinity to that old time collector who needed to make sure everyone knew that these cards were his, by gum, by marking them with his name using a misspelled stamp that dropped an S. Unfortunately I had miserable luck winning any Allen & Ginter cards for a while and all of Joe's collection went into other hands. A couple months into my Allen & Ginter type set project (which is now down to finding three maddeningly difficult cards) this card popped up on As Time Goes By and I immediately put in my max bid of $20 for the card. I surprisingly ended up winning it for significantly less than that. With a bit of luck, I not only got the flagship card of Allen & Ginter's sets but a little piece of Joe's collection. I have no clue who Mr. Duck is, but I'm glad to be able to show off one of his cards as this week's Card of the Week. Godspeed Joe K. Collector, wherever you are.

Monday, June 9, 2008

The Allen Ginter Project : Card #31 N6 City Flags

I can't get motivated today to write about 21st century cards, so let's go back to the 19th for a bit. This is the first Vintage A&G card I've gotten in a looong time which is one of the reasons I haven't written about them lately. It was feast then famine with these things, I snagged all the easy ones all in a two month period and have been scraping to even put in a losing bid since. I finally got one though, and here it is:

This is one from the N6 City Flags set. Allen And Ginter really went flag crazy with two sets of national flags, and a set each of state, city and naval flags. The city flags aren't the scarcest, but they sure seemed that way. With national and state flags seemingly all over eBay, city flags were few and far between. Naval flags are technically the scarcest series but I've seen a whole lot more of them around. Problem with those is I missed out on a United States flag way back in October or so and I've been turning my nose up at ones from Spain, France and Austria ever since.

City flags caused me different frustrations. Every time I saw one I wanted I got out bid. I wasn't overly picky either, I got outbid on all kinds of cities. I tired for American cities and bids for New Orleans, Baltimore, Chicago and Washington all fell short. International cities didn't fare any better and I lost Paris, Edinburgh and Montevideo. I even lost Mecca twice. Finally I got lucky when eBay seller ddmues put a 'grandma's attic' collection online for bid. A couple dozen individual vintage A&G cards all from the City Flags set, and best of all the seller didn't seem to specialize in trading cards as you can see from the current listings. If I couldn't win one of these buggers, I had no business building the collection. Plus there were a couple of off-grade lots to pick off if all else failed. Grandma smoked a lot of Virginia Brights apparently. Even the hard core non sports guys can't bid on everything so I was able to snag London for the opening bid of $6.99, well under budget. London's a pretty kick ass city as far as cities go so I'm very happy with this one.

The card itself is pretty nifty. the flag itself takes up the top half with a scenic view from the city underneath. I'm an ignorant American so I have no clue what those buildings are. Houses of Parliament, maybe? And the Funkadelic dome behind them? I'll go out on a limb and say the river is the Thames. The whole thing is surrounded by silver metallic ink and has the A&G advertisement on the bottom. The back has a checklist and a neat title shaped like a banner. Unfortunately this back has a lot of glue and is missing some paper on the top right corner. The corners are sharp and the front is perfect though so it's still a great looking card.

Music was a theme I was thinking about when I was scoping out city cards for some reason. I made a hard run at Baltimore just for the Frank Zappa reference. Paris had interesting possibilities. Can't go wrong with New Orleans or Chicago either. But as far as music with city references go, nothing and I mean nothing beats this:

Saturday, March 15, 2008

BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH

Especially if you live in Atlanta. Freakin' Downtown tornadoes! WTF???

God hates playoff games in the ATL apparently. The Ice Storm Super Bowl, 4 World Series flops, The Hawks and Thrashers franchise history, and now the roofless SEC tournament game. Unreal.

As long as I've broached the subject of Allen and Ginter cards with Jules up there, I'd like to apologize for being slack as hell with my Allen Ginter Project. I'm way behind on my posts and I need to catch up before I finish the thing. It's highly unlikely, but there is a very small chance I could finish the set within the week. A few breaks have to go my way, but I have some cards targeted. In the meantime, I've completed my second page of cards, so I thought I'd share. The individual posts will get done soon, I swear. In the meantime, enjoy a whole mess of 'em at once. (click to enlarge)

Only four more to go!

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

The Allen Ginter Project : Card #27 N12 Fruits

I just got three more of these in the mail and the set is getting really close to completion. I still have some older cards I received two months ago I still don't have writeups for yet, so it looks like my new box of Heritage will be opened ssssslllllooooooowwwwwwlllllyyy again to get some posts out of my draft folder. Here's the first of the three, from the set N12 Fruits.

I got damn lucky when I stumbled on this card. First of all, I hate this set. It's entirely too cute for my tastes and some of the cards frankly disgust me. The cutesy wootsy little girl with her face smeared with huckleberries puts me into a diabetic shock. These cards are also scarce and expensive. They are from a later series put out after the merger of all the major cigarette companies as you can tell from the line "Branch of the American Tobacco Company" on the back. The thing about a monopoly is that without competition, there's no more need for innovative promotions to get people to buy your product over the competitor. Mainly because there IS no competitor. After the merger a few more sets came out here and there, but not nearly as many as before. That's why there are virtually no major baseball card sets until Teddy Roosevelt starting busting trusts resulting in the card renaissance of 1909. That's right, T.R. is indirectly responsible for the T206 set. That's one of the reasons why he's my favorite president, and he should be yours too. Teddy Roosevelt for President in '08! So what if I'm 100 years too late, a guy can dream...

Onto the card. The story behind this one is kind of neat and I actually believe it this time. I got it from Nodak Nook (I don't know what the heck that means either) who got it from Grandma's estate. Yeah right, another grandma story. This one has a bit of authenticity to it though, the cards were supposedly nailed to grandma's trunk. That's right, nailed. You can see it better on the back then the front, but there are two definite nail holes in this thing. All the rest of the cards they had for sale were nailed in a similar fashion, so I'm going to guess that the story's legit. Not even my hyper-cynicism could see someone nailing cards to the wall for a story to help sell some cards. The card is also one of the least obnoxious in the set. No cute little girls mugging for the camera, just someone in some sort of native dress holding a strange little fruit called a sour sop. I've never head of it before, it's apparently used mostly for juice and ice cream. I can be a bit of a sour sop myself so this is an appropriate card for the set. Got a good deal on it too, 5 bucks plus shipping. I also won another card from this seller (coming soon) so combined shipping even. Not bad for a card that I had only previously seen slabbed and costing much more than my price range.


I had some difficulty deciding on my mandatory weird pop culture reference for this set. I thought maybe showcasing the best song from the Kennedy's best album, but I figured that was a little hardcore for such a bucolic set. Comedy seems like a better bet. There's always Mitch Hedberg from Dr. Katz, but there's only one or two fruit jokes in the set. Eddie Izzard has a good bit on supermarket fruit, and I stumbled across a classic Spike Milligan bit I'd never seen before while searching for all this stuff. But no, that was a bit too silly. This set while saccharine sweet, has a dark side to it. To some, it may as well be the N3 Arms of All Nations set. These cute little girls are actually deadly assassins! That's why we must all learn to defend ourselves from the dangers of fresh fruit!

Thursday, February 21, 2008

The Allen Ginter Project: Card #22 - N15 Great Generals

Note - I haven't gotten all the write ups for these cards done, but I do have the images all posted. Click on any of the links on the sidebar with the name of the card and you'll see the image of the card. Once I write it up I'll bump the post to the main page.

I'm way overdue for an Allen & Ginter post, so lets knock one out, shall we? This card here is from the N15 Great Generals set. When I scrounge around for these cards on eBay, some of them are plentiful like the Flags, some are ignored like the Birds, and some like the Generals are just damn expensive. The sets featuring actual historical people seem to have the most demand and cost the most. Indian chiefs, bloodthirsty pirates, and rulers of nations tend to attract a lot of attention with the baseball players trumping them all. The most hard to get set not including Cap Anson though is the one with the Generals.

This is one of those sets that in my many months of eBaying, I just haven't seen many of them out there. It could be that they are genuinely scarce, or possibly be due to collectors just not wanting to trade them away. I think I can safely generalize that a large percentage of people collecting these cards are males interested in history. This set chock full of historical greats would be catnip for those kind of people. It's also very nice looking set, featuring a bust of the general with a background relevant to his conquests. Here's the military man that made his way into my collection:

Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington was a general famous for defeating Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo. He's also a Prime Minister, a tasty dish and an action figure (sort of). I'm ptrety surprised I got him at all, I expected to end up with some third-tier Confederate General. Of course, with all the civil war buffs out there third-tier Confederate Generals are pretty highly sought after. This card was won from eBay seller eaglemom53. This was another "found the cards in an old trunk belonging to my grandfather" type auction. I'm far too jaded to believe any of those stories anymore, but she sure as heck had a lot of cards for sale. Some high rollers were watching her auctions too. There were a lot of N19 Pirates and Generals up for sale and quite a few of them were going for three figures. One day I caught a new batch right when it was listed and saw George Washington sitting out there with no bids. I certainly couldn't just leave a card like that alone so I put in my max $20 bid and waited to see what would happen. Needless to say completely blown out of the water very quickly. My bid was septupled or maybe even octupled when it was all said and done.


I knew it wasn't going to happen, so I wasn't too disappointed. It would have been cool to get a Washington card that was issued less than a hundred years from when he was first elected president, but oh well. I looked at the rest of the generals out there and saw Wellington. No bids. Pretty surprising, he was the next biggest name out there (at least as far as I could tell) and it was in pretty decent shape. The biggest problem was some paper stuck to the front. I watched the bidding start to climb on the other generals and figured I might as well at least make a run at him if I wanted to get an N15 anytime soon. I put in the max bid and waited. The auction ended. I won. How much do you think I paid for this card? Any guesses? Well I'll tell you.

$1.57.

That's including shipping.

One of the greatest Generals in history and I got it got the price of a large onion rings from Burger King. Apparently the high rollers weren't interested in a card with some schmutz stuck to the front. It's still a pretty nice looking card, you can pretty much still see everything and the back isn't too bad off. Plus there's enough silver ink on the card to put the modern manufacturers and their foil fetish to shame. Good looking card, famous general and cheap as hell to boot. The only thing that could make it better is some good hearty meat for ol' Beef Wellington. Thankfully James Lileks has a whole book full o' meat for Art and I to enjoy.

Ulp.... um, I think I'll just have some broccoli and ranch dressing instead.