Sunday, July 22, 2018

COMC Sundays: Five from the 50's

For the one person out there who enjoys these Sunday posts, I apologize for skipping last weekend, being too tired is the only excuse I have for doing so. But I'm coming off of a whole seven hours of sleep, so today's edition should be a breeze.

When I finally got my COMC stash at the end of last year, I was a bit perplexed by the inclusion of the cards in today's post. I say perplexed... because I truly didn't remember buying them.

At first I thought that I had gotten someone else's cards, but after looking at the invoice, I found that I had indeed bought these, like in January and February of that year, which I guess made sense, but still... how was I supposed to remember items that had been sitting in my account for almost a year?

1956 Topps always gets a lot of love, but you don't see too many people waxing poetic over the '55 set. I'm probably in the minority when I say this, but taken as a whole, I think that the 1955 set is better -- although if you were judging strictly on individual cards, than I'd say that '56 gets the nod.

I recently mentioned that I had stopped collecting a number of vintage baseball sets, mostly stuff from the 60's, and after over a month now, that was a decision that's starting to look better and better.

I have known for awhile that I can enjoy getting cards from the 30's and 40's without feeling like I have to try and complete the sets, but only just recently have I realized that cards from the 50's apply to that same thought process. I can't explain it, but for whatever reason, I can't seem to just enjoy owning cards from 1960 and on for what they are, without feeling like I have to complete the sets. I know that this probably makes no sense to anyone reading this, but for the time being, that's just how things seem to be... hopefully at some point though I'll be able to enjoy cards from the 60's without feeling the need to complete their respective sets.

In the same post that I talked about ending my pursuit of 60's sets, I also mentioned wanting to possibly try and take all of my existing cards from those abandoned sets, and use them to start a PCL collection. I'm still on the fence with that idea, but if I do end up going forward with it, the cards in today's post would fit nicely into that collection as all five guys played in the PCL at some point in their careers -- Bobby Adams (Portland and Seattle), Murray Wall (Seattle), Joe Frazier (Vancouver and Spokane), Les Moss (San Diego), and Marv Grissom (Sacramento and Seattle).


Thanks for taking a moment to look at my page.

10 comments:

  1. Those are all super cool. Thanks for sharing!

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    1. And thank you for being the only one to comment :)

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    2. Hey! I comment too ;)

      P.S. The enjoy the 1953 design a little more with each passing year.

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    3. Yes, you did, didn't you? Thank you for doing so, especially since this was one of my lowest viewed posts in quite some time.

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    4. Weird. Who doesn't love 50's baseball cards? Maybe it has to do with the day it was posted. My blog views definitely drop on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday... compared to Monday through Thursday. Never could explain why. Maybe the blog bots are on vacation.

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    5. Or it just wasn't a very good post.

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    6. I understand the feeling of needing to complete a set once you get a few cards you like. Lucky for me, my budget wont allow me to pursue that many sets and I've been able to focus only on 1956. Though I have to say pretty much every set from the '50s is a work of art... especially '53!

      p.s. If I hadn't been fighting a wonky internet connection and cramming in the last of my sports card tour posts I would have commented much sooner. ;)

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    7. My budget doesn't really allow for it anymore either, but that doesn't stop the urge. I don't know if stopping a bunch of sets cold turkey is going to work either, I'll probably be finding out soon though.

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  2. I'm behind on reading so therefore equally slow to comment. I pick up 40s-50s cards often for no reason other than color and design. The uniforms and logos are appealing on many, some are catchers. I know set building these decades (60s included) are not possible on my budget. I like having nice examples though across all major releases.

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    1. This is how I'm really starting to look at things as well.

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