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Messages - Victory52

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1
A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Ask the Experts at 52 Plus Joker
« on: August 19, 2015, 12:43:40 PM »

Thanks a lot Don!  Any opinion on value or whether opening the pack is a good or bad idea?

Tim

Wow - that's a big question!  The answer is really an individual's choice.  Some people like preserving their little pieces of history as intact, while others are eager to hold and use a piece of history, evoking thoughts of what life was like for the people for whom that specific deck would have been a contemporary item.

It goes without saying that opening it would reduce its value, but cash value isn't the only reason for owning something, is it?  I've also heard of some collectors opening a tuck box "surgically" from the bottom, carefully opening the cellophane at the folds and separating the bottom box flaps, allowing access to the cards to view them while at the same time preserving the cellophane tear strip and tax stamp in their original condition.  I'm not a fan of this, even if the box is carefully reglued and resealed closed to appear as it originally did, probably for much the same reasons why one can't become a virgin again after losing one's virginity.  But then again, if the work was done well, how would I know the difference, right?

I'd consider opening it for much the same reasons why one might open a fine vintage wine or champagne - not for any old reason but for some kind of special occasion, like a poker game with some buddies you haven't seen in a long time or something to that effect.

Truly an individual choice.  I'm sort of in both camps, the purist in me knows you can only break a seal once, the curious cat part of me wants to open things and play with them.  Thanks again for the helpful and thoughtful answers!

Tim


2
A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Ask the Experts at 52 Plus Joker
« on: August 18, 2015, 06:12:28 PM »
Hello, my first "real" post, and the deck that prompted me to join the forum.  I am trying to understand how to date this particular deck, but the information I found researching today is a bit confusing.  The box states N.Y. Consolidated and supposedly this dates the deck to pre-1930.  But the tax stamp dates it between 1940-1965.  The Consolidated-Dougherty cancel seems to date it to pre-1963.  These sites were my main resources:

http://playingcards.wikidot.com/articles:uspcc-history
http://dananddave.com/learn/articles/dating-playing-cards-from-1-pack-tax-stamp/

So was this old NYCCC manufactured stock that was later sold by Consolidated-Dougherty?  Or did the NYCCC brand actually exist later than 1930?  I understand that NYCCC and C-D were subsidiaries of U.S. Playing Card that operated under their own brands.  I know these questions could probably be answered by opening the pack but I'm not prepared to do that at this point since it is still fully sealed. Or does that really matter with this one?

I'm curious about value, it looks like eBay sales for seemingly equivalent decks run around $15.  Does that seem right?  I looked at Worthpoint and these were selling for around $100 back in 2011.  That's a big drop, I'm curious what happend to the market on these since then?

Any help you can offer is appreciated!

The New York Consolidated Card Company was founded in 1871, purchased by USPC in 1894 and merged into the Consolidated-Dougherty brand in 1930, under which it operated until the brand was "dissolved" and absorbed into USPC in 1962.  A. Dougherty is an even older firm, having been founded in 1848 and purchased by USPC in 1907.

Even to this day, you can buy packs of recently-made, new-stock Tally Ho playing cards that still state the manufacturer on the box face as "A. Dougherty," even though A. Dougherty as an independent corporate identity ceased to exist 85 years ago along with NYCCC.  (The copyright information on the box's bottom panel, something USPC introduced with the move to Erlanger, Kentucky in 2009, will list USPC as the manufacturer and copyright holder.  Technically the design is too old to be covered under copyright law, though it is still covered under trademark law, as long as USPC continues to keep the trademark registered.)  So I would not be surprised in the least to discover a box of Bees with the NYCCC brand which was made after the 1930 merger of the two units into Consolidated-Dougherty.

The most accurate measure of the deck's age would be the tax stamp, which in this case would place it as being made somewhere between the first use of the wide "1 PACK" tax stamp in 1940 and the abolition of the stamp tax on cards in 1965.  Someone more knowledgeable than I am might be able to narrow it further based on variations in the box design or the stamp's cancellation during that time period, but that's the best I can offer you as far as a date without the pack being opened.

Thanks a lot Don!  Any opinion on value or whether opening the pack is a good or bad idea?

Tim

3
A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Ask the Experts at 52 Plus Joker
« on: August 18, 2015, 03:12:18 AM »
Hello, my first "real" post, and the deck that prompted me to join the forum.  I am trying to understand how to date this particular deck, but the information I found researching today is a bit confusing.  The box states N.Y. Consolidated and supposedly this dates the deck to pre-1930.  But the tax stamp dates it between 1940-1965.  The Consolidated-Dougherty cancel seems to date it to pre-1963.  These sites were my main resources:

http://playingcards.wikidot.com/articles:uspcc-history
http://dananddave.com/learn/articles/dating-playing-cards-from-1-pack-tax-stamp/

So was this old NYCCC manufactured stock that was later sold by Consolidated-Dougherty?  Or did the NYCCC brand actually exist later than 1930?  I understand that NYCCC and C-D were subsidiaries of U.S. Playing Card that operated under their own brands.  I know these questions could probably be answered by opening the pack but I'm not prepared to do that at this point since it is still fully sealed. Or does that really matter with this one?

I'm curious about value, it looks like eBay sales for seemingly equivalent decks run around $15.  Does that seem right?  I looked at Worthpoint and these were selling for around $100 back in 2011.  That's a big drop, I'm curious what happend to the market on these since then?

Any help you can offer is appreciated!


4
Introduce Yourself / Re: Hello from Oregon
« on: August 18, 2015, 12:02:12 AM »
Thanks Don, just downloaded it.

5
Introduce Yourself / Hello from Oregon
« on: August 17, 2015, 11:24:14 PM »
Greetings all,  I'm Tim from Oregon.  I found this forum while trying to date and value a nice old Bee 92 deck I just found (will post it soon).  I am a private collector and seller of all things vintage, antique, and cool.  Basically I just love old stuff and spend a lot of time haunting thrift shops. I find interesting playing cards occasionally, but I don't know a lot about them yet.  I always like to learn the history of the old things I find, as well do's and don'ts in terms of preserving the value and integrity of old pieces.  Forums like this one are always a wealth of information, so, here I am!

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