Showing posts with label Organized. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organized. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

Bulkin' Up

Last year when I was organizing my Cubs collection, I found I had an awful amount of duplicates and/or cards that would need some upgrading. Until I finished, I was still hesitant to add anything except for the current year’s Cubs cards.


Card shows are a tough place to fill big gaps. It's almost like a needle in a haystack. Sometimes you get lucky and find a dealer that has singles from a couple of sets you're working on, or maybe a dime box with some random stuff. But most of the tables I've run across that have boxes sorted by teams are filled with dollar (or more) cards.

There are some good websites for singles, but the ones with the best selection and prices (Just Commons and Sportlots), don't necessarily offer photos. I like to think I'm far from a card snob, but I do tend to prefer a nicely centered, sharp cornered/edged card if given the choice. (No offense to Jeff and his pretty cool miscut collection.)

COMC and a few sellers on eBay are good about scanning every card they have, but most times their prices reflect that extra effort. That's alright for a few singles here or there, but not when you're trying to make a big dent. I've found some good Desert Shield cards this way and finished off a couple of mid-late 1980’s Topps sets, too, when miscuts were almost the rule rather than the exception.

But let's get back to my collection. Knock on wood, everything is currently organized how I want it, and I'm almost done cataloging it. Well, my official Cubs and complete set collections anyway. All of my dupes, trade bait and about 18 months' worth of repacks are still in a state of disarray. That's the next big project.

I’m estimating that when all is said and done this weekend with the cataloging, I'll have about 6,000 unique Cubs cards in my spreadsheet (that mostly still have to be added to Zistle). Sadly, I thought I was closer to breaking into quintuple digits. Stupid dupes!

And then I went crazy.

I was looking for something specific on eBay after the most recent card show and ran across a few bulk lots of Cubs cards. They ranged from a couple of bucks for a couple hundred cards to nearly $100 for thousands of cards. Definitely cheaper than dime boxes on a per card basis, but that's where dupes comes into play. High risk for a potentially low reward.

But I did what I couldn't do last year and that was pull the trigger. Hence the title. I ended up picking up a couple of these lots in the low to mid range I mentioned above. When all was said and done, I think I spent about $100 on around 7,000 Cubs cards.

All Cubs!

Probably 6,999 dupes.

Actually, I consider myself a pretty savvy shopper and after looking closely at the pictures and descriptions, as long as they’re accurate, I think I’ll do ok. That breaks down to about a penny and half per card. I’ll be super excited if I end up at about a dime per new card. That means there have to be about 1,000 new-to-me cards in the lots. 

That sounds like a lot, but by comparison, I'm only about halfway to Wrigley Wax's Cubs collection of over 12,000. So there are definitely places I can fill in gaps (pre-mid 1970's and late 90's-mid 2000's). I’d probably still be fairly happy if they end up being about $0.25 per new card since I would still have all the dupes to trade or flip.

The first lot arrived last night so I’ll be digging into that today and will have the results and hopefully some scans tomorrow. Wish me luck!

Aside from my Dave and Adam’s Card World purchase (thanks to those who joined my break!), these will be my last purchases for quite a while.


Monday, June 18, 2012

Father's Day Gifts / Display Idea

I had two big goals when I decided to re-enter the hobby.
  1. Accumulate Cubs cards faster than they come out (to make up for past years I missed).
  2. Get and stay organized.
When we bought our house a couple years ago, I took over the very small room for my office/den/mancave. A lot of my autograph collection is signed books. I worked in a bookstore for quite a while and picked up a bunch of them through book signings in my store or other contacts in the industry.

Then, I started picking up cards again last year and my wife stressed that she didn't want to just look at a bunch of white boxes. As a good husband, I agreed. Plus I wanted to be able to look at them easily so I put them into binders.

I'm sure its the same with most of you, but my wife is generally a lot more supportive of the second goal than the first. Occasionally she'll ask to see what I got in the mail but I'm pretty sure she doesn't actually care. She has no idea what I have or don't have or want when it comes to baseball cards. So when she asked if there was anything I wanted particularly for Father's Day, I went easy on her and gave her an idea that would help with Goal #2. Win-win.

I'm still a new kid on the block when it comes to the blogosphere but I think I came up with a pretty revolutionary idea for being able to keep a closer eye on my cards. The product itself isn't new but I haven't seen or heard of anybody else using them for this purpose. So now that I have over-hyped it to the point where it can only disappoint, I am going to insert a very rarely used "jump" and make you click to see it.