Trading Cards
HUGE LOT of BOX SETS FOR SALE
1990 Donruss 36 count puzzle and cards featuring Carl Yastrzemski puzzle
1989 Fleer complete set 660 cards and stickers
(2X) 1991 Topps complete set 792 picture cards
1991 Score 900 player cards 72 magic motion trivia cards
1990 Fleer 36 count retail box 10th anniverary edition
(2X) 1991 Topps Traded set collectable set of 132 special topps baseball cards
39 loose packs 1989 Donruss
5 loose packs 1990 Donruss
6 loose packs Upper Deck 1990 edition
1 89′ Fleer Ken Griffey Jr **ROOKIE CARD**
5 89′ Donrus Ken Griffey Jr **ROOKIE CARD**
2 90′ Sammy Sosa Donruss **ROOKIE CARD**
1 90′ Sammy Sosa Upper Deck **ROOKIE CARD**
3 90′ Juan Gonzales Donruss **ROOKIE CARD**
2 90′ Juan Gonzalez Upper Deck **ROOKIE CARD**
2 89′ Randy Johnson Fleer **ROOKIE CARD**
1 89′ Nolan Ryan 5000K U-67 Fleer
BID ON EBAY NO RESERVE
or
BUY NOW ON CRAIGSLIST and pick up locally.
ADDED BONUS IF BID GETS OVER $100
Approximately 2700 loose cards and about another 300 in plastic wrap
5 jewel cases with cards inside and some plastic binders with cards in them.
a lot of Mother’s cookie Nolan Ryan cards and an Advil Nolan Ryan unopened pack from 93. Some Coke Nolan Ryan packs that are unopened. Lots of various cards in wrappers
Bolster your Trading Card Collections
Whenever you had your first brush with the world of trading card collection, whether it was with the famous Baseball editions that popularized the medium or the shiny embossment behind the rarest of Pokemon sets, it is likely that the lucrative value of the collections was the main attraction. If you ask any real collector, the value is like anything else in life; the value is subjective. The desire for a particular item is shaped by what other cards exist in the given collections and what level of completeness they bring to a certain set or the collections in their entirety. Consequently, trading for a profit is an extremely difficult and specific ordeal. Many would-be card collections have started up with a bang and dissolved away soon after, or as soon as the hopeful collector realizes the futility of trading for pure profit. Many look to more well-known transactions, like the cigarette trading editions of Honus Wagner, which after an extremely limited production have been sold for as much as $3 million. This is an example of a non-sport trading card that holds great value, but on average sports cards featuring professional athletes retain the greatest value.
There are ratings for the quality of trading cards, and there is terminology for the various packages these come in. These terms are as subjective as the value of the cards themselves and exist more as guidelines for the average collections to appraise their worth. However, if someone desires to build a trading card collection, the reasons for acquiring such items must be personally important. As one builds their collector’s set each addition should bring a sense of fulfillment. Because lucrative deals and trades arise at random, are often temporary offers, and require familiarity with the collections network, it is better to build collections for the sake of its personal worth rather than try to collect the most valuable items. If one can develop a sense of fulfillment with each addition to their collection, bolstering the set will come easily and the continuing results will be a reward itself.
Websites are a helpful resource for locating and appraising the value of these collections. For more rare collectibles and limited editions that are typically spread out around the world the interconnected nature of the internet makes locating these valuable finds much more simple. But no matter how one acquires a trading card for collections, it is essential that the collector understands their subjective value.














