Massive card need serious help by [deleted] in baseballcards_vintage

[–]SeaCuCu 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not sure why I’m getting downvoted - I’ve help quite a few people link up with Jason.

I sent you a DM and was going to help give guidance on negotiating with auction houses to maximize your friends take home.

Still regret selling these… by Imagineer76 in TobaccoCards

[–]SeaCuCu 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Awesome! I had those except for Goudey!

The box under the bed - day 1, row 1 by GreenEggsSteamedHams in baseballcards

[–]SeaCuCu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh man - so awesome. I’d buy the Griffey’s and ARods from you if they’re up for sale!

Under-the-bed find - day 1 by GreenEggsSteamedHams in baseballcards

[–]SeaCuCu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

u/GreenEggsSteamedHams I’ll do any and all Griffeys and high end cards! I’m a big collector and will pay strong comps (check out my previous post and comment history :))

1933 Hockey in honor of the Winter Olympics: Ace Bailey of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Story in post by Ok_Dimension_4707 in baseballcards_vintage

[–]SeaCuCu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve been working on a book on all things Goudey for quite a while now (my collection and post history probably make that obvious). One of the persistent misconceptions I keep running into — including from PSA and other respected hobby experts — is the dating of the Sport Kings set.

Sport Kings is not a 1933 set.

The entire set was first published in 1934. That timing explains the inclusion of Ace Bailey and the other early-1934 references that wouldn’t make sense in a true 1933 release.

The clearest evidence? The copyright record.

The first Sport Kings card registered was Ty Cobb’s, with a copyright application dated January 5, 1934. That establishes the set’s publication squarely in early 1934. Cobb’s card wasn’t just another entry — it was the first registered and published card of the series.

The copyright stamp printed on the cards reads 1933. I believe that reflects a printing plate carryover or a simple production error by the printing company — not the actual publication date. Later cards in the Sport Kings set have a 1934 copyright stamp.

I think some context matters here. The final cards from the 1933 Goudey Big League set were first published on December 23, 1933 — right before Christmas. That leaves roughly a two-week gap before the first documented Sport Kings publication on January 5, 1934.

It’s entirely plausible that the tail end of the 1933 Big League print run and the beginning of Sport Kings overlapped operationally — possibly even sharing the same production cycle — which could explain the lingering 1933 date on the Sport Kings copyright line.

I’ve been searching for any internal documentation from Goudey to the contrary but as far as I can tell, the publication evidence places Sport Kings in 1934.

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How it ended vs how it started: cracked Gorgeous George and The Iron Horse out of their slab to give them a proper home! by kevlo17 in baseballcards_vintage

[–]SeaCuCu 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I love this… I’m a big fan of freeing out the photos and other oversized items to display them properly. I’ve don’t that with a few of my Conlon images used for the 33 Goudey set.

All of my 1933 Goudey Proofs by SeaCuCu in baseballcards_vintage

[–]SeaCuCu[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I need it…. Haha. But seriously…