Showing posts with label 1990. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1990. Show all posts

Saturday, January 9, 2021

1990 Topps Hockey - Thanks Greg @ Nine Pockets

Last month Greg over at Nine Pockets was hosting a giveaway to celebrate his 2-year blogiversary.  I was lucky enough to snag the two 1990-1991 unopened Topps Hockey packs.  It's hard to believe that while Topps was still using wax and old school paperboard to make their cards in 1990, Upper Deck had entered the scene with high-gloss printing, foil wrappers, and holograms which made their cards seem light years ahead of the competition. Flash forward 30 years most of us yearn for that old wax and old feel of cards shuffling through our hands again.


Oddly enough, it doesn't appear anyone is really grading this set and there are no complete graded sets out there on the PSA Registry.  It does appear a lot of people are chasing the Wayne Gretzky (Cards #1-3, #120, & #199), Jeremy Roenick (#7), Alexander Mogilny (#42), Brett Hull (#77), Mario Lemieux (#175), Steve Yzerman (#222), & Mike Modano (#348).  Let's see if I can snag one of these stars...let'r rip!



Boom, nailed a Gretzky....and these cards are amazing in hand....no complaints at all!  I am sure a lot of people term these as junk wax, but for me these are gold!  Thanks Greg for the hook up and congrats on your 2-year blogiversary!  Sayonara and have an awesome weekend!

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Golden Cards - 1990 Chiyonofuji Sumo Wrestling Telephone Cards

The Telephone Card Craze in the late 1980s and early 1990s in Japan must have been madness.  Telephone companies couldn't print the cards fast enough as it was like printing money.  Although they held value for use in telephones, they held much more value among collectors.  It was almost pure profit at that point for the companies so a wide variety of subjects and of different quality flooded the market.  This high-quality set from 1990 commemorates Yokozuna Chiyonofuji's 1000 top-division win and 30th championship.  There are three cards in this set with two of them that have a mirror-gold finish and they come in this really amazing 3D foldout holder.   This holder folds up and is tucked away in a white paper envelope.  Not sure what the cost would have been back in the day, but imagine somewhere between ¥5000-¥10000.  Chiyonofuji passed away in 2016, but is absolutely one of the top 5 Yokozuna to ever grace the sport.

Anyone else collect Japanese telephone cards?






Thursday, May 2, 2019

Mystery Solved - Spanish Flea Market and Portuguese Calendar Cards

I've had these six 1986 sumo wrestling cards for a while and was never able to really place them except they appeared to be from Lisbon, Portugal and measure 2 3/4" x 3 3/8".  All backs are identical on the sumo set.  Last weekend, however, I was exploring Madrid's famous Rastro Flea Market and came across a booth that was selling hundreds of different calendar card sets including the exact same sumo set I had in my collection.  After browsing all the sets, it appears that from the mid 1980s to early 1990s, these calendar cards were the hot thing to collect in Spain and Portugal.  There was everything from celebrities, to art, to animals, to sports....you name it, there was a set for it.  I was able to purchase these 3 sets for 10 Euro (~$12): the 6-card 1986 Sumo Wrestling set, the 12-card 1986 Mr. Olympia Bodybuilding Set, and the 12-card 1990 Space Exploration set.  Then when I got back home I went to eBay and bam.....I typed in "Portuguese Calendar Cards" and this whole new world opened up for me.  See for yourself.  I can't imagine any of them are licensed, but what do you guys think?  Cool or not cool?




 



Sunday, March 4, 2018

1990 Sumo Wrestling NTT Telephone Cards

In the 1980s and early 1990s, Japan went through an extremely widespread and popular telephone card collecting boom.  Any and every subject was printed on telephone cards.  There were collecting magazines, collecting groups, and even investors who snagged up the plethora of cards that hit the market during this ~10-year timeframe.  The phone function behind these 2 1/8" x 3 3/8" flimsy plastic cards, beyond the collecting aspect, is simple.  Buy a card for a set price and you would be able to carry it around with you and make calls from any NTT telephone across the country.  This precluded you from having to carry any cash.  Once purchased these cards would be inserted into the public phone to activate the phone.  Simply make your call and when you are done, the phone would punch a little hole on the card to let you know how many credits you had left.  Once people started buying them to collect, rather than to be used, the phone companies pumped out the cards by the millions.  It was a almost like free money because a "punched" card was worth a lot less than an unused card.  People would buy them and store them away never intending to ever use them.  During this time, hundreds of different cards with sumo wrestlers were also produced.  Cataloguing them, however, is proving to be a little difficult.  At some point in 1991, NTT switched over from a standard back (shown below) to one with a barcode.  The pre-barcode cards actually had individual card numbers on the back.  Once they switched to the bar code, the barcode number stayed the same no matter what the subject was on the front.

It has taken me sometime to start working on cataloguing telephone cards.  Simply because they usually run around $10US per card...there still is a healthy market for the cards surprisingly.  Now that the number of new sumo wrestling menko and bromide cards being discovered is decreasing, I can focus more of my efforts to these modern collectibles.  I plan on cataloguing these telephone cards with the "CT" (Card, Telephone) prefix in the 5th Edition of my book.  Why the CT, and not just T or C?  Well during this time as well, Japan Railways issued similarly looking cards called Orange Cards, that could be used to pay for train travel.  I plan on cataloguing those as "CR" (Card, Railway).  

This set is from 1990 and is significant since it captures four of the modern day Yokozuna as well as Konishiki, a popular, but controversial wrestler from Hawaii.  This is the first CT set I've catalogued and it will be forever known as the [CT901/1990 NTT Facsimile Signature Set] in my book.

Here is the checklist:
110-47552: Yokozuna Chiyonofuji
110-47553: Yokozuna Onokuni
110-47554: Yokozuna Hokutoumi
110-47555: Ozeki Hokutenyu
110-47556: Ozeki Konishiki
110-47557: Ozeki Asahifuji



 Thanks for stopping by.