April 21, 2011

Razor Ink Vault Sketch Card? Not so fast. . .

I came across this item on eBay (Item 200597783527) . . .

Title:

09 TOPPS RAZOR SIG. SKETCH CARD MARK WALTERS

Description:

YOU ARE BIDDING ON A ARTIST SKETCH CARD STAR WARS. MARK WALTERS. NAME PRINTED ON FRONT OF CARD. CARD IS NOT SIGNED. CARD IS IN MINT CON.

It didn’t look right to me. I emailed Razor/Leaf boss Brian Gray. Within minutes Brian responded with “This is not a legitimate Razor item.”

I then emailed the seller to verify that it wasn’t a recycled Ink Vault top loader as some folks on forums suspected. After some back and forth with the seller he said. . .

that the way i bought the card, ui never broke the seal. i don,t think the card was pulled that way. i pull cards out of packs & putb them in top loaders. if it,s a really good card i put it in a magicnic case.if it was pulled that way i can,t say for sure. that is the first card like that i have seen.

We exchanged a few emails, and he said he’d look at his records to see if he could determine where he bought the card from. . .

What do you guys think? Is this a big deal or not so much? I’ll update the poll so you can share your voice.

Jon

November 8, 2010

Pop Century: Round 2.

Filed under: box breaks,Razor,reviews — webjon @ 8:25 pm

My second box of Pop Century from eBay came in. This box cost $59.90 shipped. I didn’t do great on the other box — the contents yielded about half the purchase price. Fingers crossed that I do better the 2nd time around.

Costumes:

Still no parallels this time, but slightly better swatches. Drew Berrymore has an interesting stripe, Katherine Heigl has a cuff, and the infamous Russell Crow(e) card has a bit of a pattern. From a value stand point it’s about a buck for the guys and a couple to about five bucks for the gals. These would bring about $10 on eBay.

The autographs:

Sean Astin (Rudy/LOTR), Justin Guarini (American Idol) and Sarah Douglas (Superman/Stargate). This break was a bit of a special kick in the gut for me since I just bought autographs from these folks two days before the box arrived. Oops. Them’s the breaks, I guess. Most of these actors have all signed trading cards before Pop Century. Astin for several including a bunch of LOTR sets, as well as Fans of the Game. Sarah Douglas has signed a ton of trading cards for everything from Babylon 5 to Conan to Stargate. . . all of those autographs are available for under $10 — so I have no idea why Razor thought another one was needed, or would be sought after. Despite appearing in an American Idol set that featured autographs Guarini hasn’t had an autograph until Pop Century. What I never watch Idol, I do pay attention to entertainment news, and since Guarani’s theatrical bomb ‘From Justin to Kelly’ or whatever it was called left theaters I haven’t heard his name. Perhaps that’s why his autographs keep selling on eBay for $.99. Given the number of Idols who haven’t had autographs, but would be rather sought after today Guarani is an odd choice. . . I’d rather have Kelly Clarkson’s autograph any day.

Since the Douglas autograph is a parallel #’d to 25 I would probably have to spend about $10 to pick up all of these autographs on eBay. So my $59 box brought $20 in cards — ouch.

I still really enjoy this set, but my last two boxes cost nearly $120 and netted about $55 in cards — perhaps I should stick buying singles. . .

Jon

October 26, 2010

Popping back in with Pop Century.

Filed under: box breaks,Razor,reviews — webjon @ 10:45 pm

Blowout cards is selling boxes of Razor (Leaf) Pop Century for under $70. Each box contains 3 autographs and 3 super size costume cards, at release these boxes were over $100, and allocated — lots of dealers either got their orders reduced from what they wanted, or didn’t get any boxes at all. So in a matter of a few months it’s gone from so hot it’s allocated to landing in the bargain bin.

$70 is a great price for 6 hits, but I recently picked up a couple of boxes on eBay for even less than that. This review really started as a box breakdown. This will probably be my 5th box of Pop Century. The first box I opened concealed a 1/1 Masterpiece autograph of Richard Nixon. That’ll be hard to top. Even without the Nixon though I’ve been satisfied with my cards in Pop Century. That has been come a theme with products I’ve opened lately — satisfaction. Which certainly beats disappointment, but after plunking down $100 for a box of cards I’d like to be more than satisfied. I was far more than satisfied when I pulled the Nixon, and I certainly don’t expect a US President in every box, but clearly — as I look at my bargain bin purchase lots of other people were satisfied, or less, with Pop Century, but why?

The easy answer is in the autographs. Well over half, if not three-quarters of the autographs are repeat signers from other sets. That works with folks with universal appeal like Hayden Panettiere or Henry Winkler, but falls totally flat for folks like Levar Burton. His Star Trek autographs bring in $60-75 or more, but you’d be lucky to sell his Pop Century autograph for $6, and it’s the only hard signed autograph in the series! I can understand why Razor would bring in Levar — it’s impossible to predict that his Pop Century autograph would bring less than 10% of his Star Trek autos, but why go after signers who have cards in other sets that only sell for $5-15? Helen Slater, Todd Bridges, Corbin Bernsen, Jeff Conaway, Joyce Dewitt, Kevin Sorbo, Margot Kidder, Richard Kiel, Sean Astin, Sarah Douglas, etc, etc, etc are all available from other sets cheap.

That’s not to say there aren’t great autographs in this set — there are great autographs, but there mixed in with so many easy to find repeats that it’s hard to get excited about them. The dual autographs could be great — I mean — Linda Hamilton and Edward Furlong is a brilliant dual autograph, but a lot of the others just leave me scratching my head. I’m sure the autographs are related to each other somehow (Elvira/Jeff Conaway?!?), but if it isn’t immediately obvious it isn’t going to resonate with collectors.

Even with their issues the autographs are the star of this show. The costumes play a distant second fiddle to them — most of the costumes can be picked up cheap! They managed to get some really great names (even misspelled ones like Russell Crow), and the swatches are huge, but the design is really not appealing. Only one costume has an actor’s photograph on it (Corey Haim), the rest just have the same bland ‘curtain’ design in either blue or red. I think if the design were improved these could have been a much bigger deal. There are some amazing variations in these swatches.

The poor design of the costume cards was slightly surprising after seeing the excellent design of the base and dual autographs. Even the photograph-less masterpiece autographs are attractive, which is odd considering it uses the same die cut as the costume card. Unfortunately the excellent autograph design doesn’t carry over to the Award Winners cards, whose cheesy design is more reminiscent of the curtained costumes than the cool autographs.

Regardless of the issues this series has it remains one of my favorites, and one of the few new products I’ve purchased this year. I’m hoping my box contains Bo Derek, Harrison Ford or Kim Kardashian — of course I’d be thrilled with a masterpiece autograph!

. . . let’s see what my $59 bought. . .

First the three costumes. . . No parallels, just Denzel, Brad and Uma. Uma’s swatch has a pretty cool pattern in it, and Brad’s has a seam.

And the autographs:

Butch Patrick (The Munsters), Amy Weber (WWE Diva) and Jennifer Coolidge (American Pie/Legally Blonde). True to the odds only one of these three is a first time signer. Patrick has singed for Munsters sets, and Weber for Benchwarmer. Even though the Coolidge autograph is numbered to 25, this is a bit of a bum box. Recent eBay sales reveal these autographs selling for $10 each for the ladies, and a bit less for Eddie Munster.

Unless you hit a Madonna or a really funky swatch all the costumes sell for $1-5 each, and that’s the case here. About a buck for Denzel, a couple for Pitt, but Thurman brings a fiver. So the total value is about $35 from my $59 box. Ouch. Hopefully my other box arrives soon and makes up for the difference!

Jon

June 26, 2010

Razor Pop Century Sells Out Fast, But Looks Familiar.

Filed under: news,opinion,Razor — webjon @ 6:41 pm

The Razor Pop Century set is coming out soon. . . it sold out in less than 24 hours, and it’s a set I’m sure I’ll collect cards from. I love the Americana and Celebrity Cuts sets, but I have to say looking at the autograph list they’ve posted so far has left me less than excited about Pop Century. . . I’m not talking about the 1/1s — I’ll never get one of those, so the cards I care about are the ones I’ll actually try to add to my collection — the signed and dual signed cards. Here is info posted on Non-Sports Card forum:

“Look for signed and dual signed cards of Hollywood icons such as: HARRISON FORD, William Shatner, Pam Anderson, Ron Howard, all 3 Kardashian sisters, Ashley Judd, Audrina Patridge, Bo Derek, Hayden Panetierre, Larry Hagman, Henry Winkler, Mark Hamill, Peter Fonda, Richard Dreyfuss, and tons more!!!!!!”

That is an impressive list for sure, except one thing — nearly all these people have signed before! The new signatures here are the 2 less famous Kardashian sisters, Audrina Patridge (she already has a Pop Century Preview card in Ink Vault 2010), and Bo Derek — pretty cool, but only 3 totally new autographs! The rest are all repeats, although Fonda’s American Biker Card autograph is obscure to say the least. I’m not sure why these companies keep going back to this well of signers, perhaps they all use the same agent.

. . I would say if you are going to get repeats don’t forget Jane Russell, Lauren Bacall, Cloris Leachman, and Buzz Aldrin. . . but let’s focus on new autos.

For some reason the industry can’t seem to come up with new and great signers for official autograph cards, I have TONS of ideas — more than a set’s worth, and I’m going to share ‘em here as I think of ‘em. Here are the first 10 obvious autograph cards they should go after:

1. Judge Wapner (And Marilyn Milian)
2. Mary Lou Retton
3. Neil Armstrong
4. Chuck Norris
5. Bret Michaels
6. Mr. T
7. Betty White
8. Angela Lansbury
9. Dana Carvey
10. Bob Barker

Alright. . . now there are some themes here, and these are just ideas I popped off the top of my head. . . I went for names of people I thought would be reasonably possible to obtain, of course I could have just said Jessica Alba, Jessica Biel and other hotties, but that is too obvious, and impossible to obtain.

There were many modern ideas that I’ve had too — like the crew from Mythbusters (Adam, Jamie, Grant, Tori and Kari — especially Kari), the guys from Pawn Stars, whoever wins America’s Got Talent, etc. If you expand my themes from above, there are TONS of TV judges out there, you could get more 80s icons like Tom Selleck and Jan-Michael Vincent, more commedians like Zach Galifianakis and Andrew Dice Clay, and you could follow up with Americana’s Game Show hosts by covering Vanna White and Pat Sajak plus Alex Trebek, Merv Griffin, Richard Karn and then moderize it and get Jeff Probst, Howie Mandell, and Phil Keoghan. All of these are great autographs, and none have been done before. And don’t forget some new young talent. . . I don’t know these guys so I can’t help much there. . .

There you go — nearly 30 suggestions. . . Let me know what you think of my list in the comments, and post any other ideas you have. . . I’ll post more as I think of ‘em too.

Jon



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