What A Seller Wants As the country's top buyer of vintage sports cards, we have had plenty of inquiries from collectors and families of collectors that have been interested in selling their collections or getting FREE evaluations on the collections. When you get as many inquiries as we get on a daily bases and buy as many collections every week as we do at Just Collect, you get a really good idea of what people are looking for -- even if they don't know
Corning Isn't Just Glass When most people hear the mention of Corning, NY, many will immediately think of Corning Glass, Pyrex, CorningWare or Corelle kitchenware. This would be one of the first things we would think of as Corning Glass is world renowned and most of us have heard of Corelle (which is still manufactured in Corning) and Pyrex. Just Collect received an inquiry recently from a recently retired gentleman that used to work for Corning and still lived
The Screw Down Collection We hear from many collectors through our email and via telephone calls engaging in conversations about their collections. Our specialists do a great job assisting these people with their inquiries. A few of the common questions revolve around storage of single cards and sets. We always suggest that the collector explore their options and determine what suits them best but one thing that we frown upon and would implore folks against using screw down holders and always
In early September, we were contacted by a gentleman from South New Jersey who wanted to sell his entire baseball card and memorabilia collection. The collection consisted of vintage card sets, yearbooks, programs, Super Bowl tickets, World Series tickets, autographed baseballs, and some rare autographed cuts. And when I say vintage sets, it wasn’t just a few sets from the late 1970s. It was dozens of sets, ranging from the 1930s through the 1970s, of all sports. You name it, he had it… it was one of the nicest collections we’ve ever
Kearse-s! What A Difference A Play Makes! Tyree. Manningham. Kearse. They're not marquee names but they are responsible for some of the most clutch moments in the history of the sport. Each of them made an other-wordly catch in the fading seconds of the Super Bowl to set the stage for a go-ahead touchdown and a place in football history. And while only the avid fan remembers that it was Plaxico Burress who crossed the goal line for the Giants following David Tyree's impossible "helmet catch" or that Ahmad Bradshaw broke the plain after Mario Manningham found the last bit