I guess I should post, but it's going to be difficult with the distraction from Josh's post
Jeff, based on Tom's reply when he gave feedback on my article, you are the type of collector they had in mind when they brought about the U grade. A collector wanting a mint off the card figure for their own loose collection. You mention the early days when someone on the boards would open a beater and I remember that too. I even opened a few in my early days (early 90's) when dealers had tons of common overstock baggies for my loose set as they were they same price as a loose figure was and I'll admit I didn't know the significance of a baggie back then and would never do that now.
I feel that AFA should have stopped the practice once they realized what dealers/collectors were doing. Right on their front page it says "For Evaluation, Preservation, and Authentication". How are they preserving when they offer a service like this that is/has obviously been abused? Yes, part of the problem lies with the collectors that are doing this, but the other lies with the company offering the service as well. If someone really wants an off the card fresh figure for their collection, why not AFA wipe their hands clean of it. A collector can still open up the figure, send it in, get the grade minus the U and still know that they have a fresh figure. That stops the dealers from sending in multiples for the U95 and the collector still knows they have a fresh figure. I would prefer the neither be done, but it would at least have stopped that mass destruction that occurred and kept it down to the minimal numbers like we had before the U grade existed. I feel that AFA should have taken some responsibility for this as they were the ones who brought it on.
James Simmonds said:
This is a really interesting thread. Has anyone considered what happens if or when AFA ceases to exist? What will happen to the perceived value of any graded AFA figures then? Would their reputation mean that graded items maintained their 'value' or would collectors who paid over the odds for a 90 or 95 figure be lumbered with a cased figure that now holds now more value to collectors than a loose one?
James.
Only time will tell. I personally think at some point it won't matter wether an item was graded or not, but that depends on how strong the SW brand stays over the years and how many collectors stay in the hobby.
I posed the same question about what if AFA ceased to exist to another collector who had stated
i MUST have my vintage SW collection graded and in cases, PERIOD.
fine by me if less people have and use AFA. I feel then, that those vintage SW in the afa graded packaging will be rarer, more desired and worth more and it will be a nice preserved slice of the hobby.
This statement concerned me quite a bit. I believe it was a fairly new collector, but it states to me that he is more concerned about the acrylic and label over the item inside and that is what makes his pieces rare in his collection. It reminds me of the collector Jeff mentioned who had all the money and didn't take care of what he had.
I love my acrylic cases just as much as anyone, but it is the item inside, the history. and what it means to me that I care about. The acrylic case is merely a tool to help protect these items. The collector pretty much avoided that question and basically stated that they'd always be around.