Chaos and Kanji is the blog where I write about my adventures through Japan!

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Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Greatness from Steve M - Part 4, The Finale

You know the saying. Good things come in small packages. That's certainly true for many things, though I'm not sure Steve's package could be called "small" - it was a 200-count box packed with great cards. Okay, maybe he could have forked over a small fortune to send me a monster box filled with 1993 Finest Refractors, or sent over a shipping container overflowing with low-numbered parallels. But on the other hand, one or two cards is small. And I digress.
 There was quite a large number of cards in the box, all of them great, but I was most happy to see the smaller-sized cards. The throwback minis Topps inserted into its packs over the past few years have slowly grown on me, and I've been gradually building the sets, picking up cards here and there whenever I can get them at a reasonable price. But the 1989s from 2014 (does that make sense to anyone?) have been fairly elusive. Steve found a mass of them, though.
 The 1989s might be my favorite of the throwback minis. 1989 was the year I started collecting, so the relatively simple design has a lot of nostalgia.
 This is also the only year that were die-cut. That gives them just a tiny edge over the others.
 One thing I've noticed about these minis is that the photos are very similar in style to the original 1989s. Lots of not-quite action shots to avoid blur, and plenty of posed shots.
 As far as action shots go, those three show about the least amount of action you can get from the field.
 How cool would it have been if Topps had called him Rock Raines again?
 "Pudge" Rodriguez doesn't look so pudgy there.
 Compare "Pudge" to Prince. Then you'll see what I mean.
 I think the cards from this point on are from Update. Or at least Series 2. Topps used a whole bunch of Spring Training shots later on in the set. That screams 1980s Topps.
 Double Bryce. Twice as nice?
 Nothing says multi-million dollar MLB player like a chain link fence and a bush.
 I bet some of these pictures were taken specifically for sets like Heritage, Archives, and this set in mind.
 Were all the Yankees active player photos taken at Yankee Stadium in posed shots?
 Joey Votto's picture looks like it was taken late in the afternoon. That's pretty cool, if you ask me.
 The only thing these cards are missing are cars parked in the background.
 When Troy grows up, he wants to be 6'7"!
 Another active Yankee, another empty stadium.
And that wraps up the massive mini menagerie. Mail day is rare, and these cards are totally appreciated! Thank you very much Steve. Hopefully I can get some great stuff going your way again soon! ありがとうございます!

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