Non-Sport Update — August-September 2017

(avery) #1

THE GIMMICK


Early on, the backs of these cards were more important


than the fronts. While the fronts feature great artwork and


design, the backs are ugly. Orange is the color of choice with


printing in white. Small shields enclose card numbers at the


top left, followed by the name and a brief biography of the


pictured person. At the bottom of each card back is a trivia


question. Answers are revealed only by covering the card wth


a red cellophane strip included in every card pack.


THE FORMAT


Card fronts are almost identical to the 1952 Topps baseball


set. Striking portraits are bordered in white with the subject’s


name below in a white rectangular box bordered in gold.


Each name is accompanied by a small emblem that indicates


the person’s role in life. For example, Harry Truman’s seal is a


presidential eagle, Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s is a cannon, and


Cochise has a western wagon. Measuring 2 1/16"-by-2 15/16",


the cards are smaller than their baseball counterparts (2 5/8"-


by-3 1/4") and today’s standard (2 1/2"-by-3 1/3").


THE PEOPLE


The 135 personalities portrayed run the gamut from “A”


(explorer Roald Amundsen) to “Z” (writer Emile Zola) and


their lives span more than two millennium (from Julius


Caesar’s birth in 100 B.C. to the reign of England’s Queen


Elizabeth II which continues to this day). It must be a strong


assemblage when cards picturing Albert Einstein and Winston


Churchill are classified as “commons.”


SHORT PRINTS


The set was produced in two series (1-75 and 76-135)


and several of the second group have been identified as short


prints. The key was the surfacing of an uncut sheet of series


two cards. The way the cards were laid out on the sheet, it


appeared that the nine in the bottom row are short prints


(cards #82, 84, 88, 98, 101, 112, 118, 130, 133). It has become


generally accepted that card #82 of Dutch artist Rembrandt is


the scarcest and prices attached to it have soared, sometimes


passed “Ruthian” proportions.)


CURRENT PRICES


Professional grading is the tide that has raised a boatful


of card values. PSA lists the value (pristine condition) of the


#15 Ruth in the $1,500 range and the #82 Rembrandt card at


$4,000. The winning bid at auction for a 1¢ wrapper and a 5¢


display box was $1,208 in 2004, one of the few exchanges of


boxes. Ungraded cards are slotted much lower — $900 for a


full set of 135, $200 for Babe Ruth, $15 for commons in the


first series and $10 in the second. NSU


Have a Look


24 Non-Sport Update

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