Antique Collecting: Baseball Cards at Garage Sales

Viewing videos requires the latest version of Adobe's Flash Player.
Get the latest Flash player.
Showing 1-5

Part of the video series: Antiques & Collectibles: Garage Sales

Summary: An antique store owner explains how to evaluate baseball cards you might find at garage sales and what to look for in this free video on antiques.

Views: 620 | Tags: baseball, vinyl, collecting, railroad, garage, sale, dolls, books, estate, comic, barbie, antiquing, records, memorabilia, antique collecting


About the Expert

Jan Braunstein Jan Braunstein owns and operates the Antique Avenue antiques store in Pomona, California. Her mother also owned an antiques store. She is a certified antique ... read more

Conversations About This Video

  • Comments
    (0 comments)
  • Questions & Answers
    (0 questions) (0 answers)
Be the first to comment on this video.
Have a question about this video topic? Ask our community members and let them share their knowledge with you!
Ask A Question

Video Transcript

Antique Collecting: Baseball Cards at Garage Sales

You know those stories you hear about going to garage sales or about buying a new house and going into a closet and finding these boxes of phenomenal baseball cards? It still happens. So it may be kind of a folk tale and it may sound kind of funny. Aw, gee, it'll never happen to me. But you know what? Every now and then you might spot baseball cards. So I would definitely look at baseball cards. Most of the time when you go to a garage sale you'll find really modern cards. And you can tell by looking at the back of the cards what the years are. Because when they show the stats, the years will be there. And so you can assume it's the year just after the stat that's shown and that will show you the age. Baseball cards from the seventies, eighties. There are selective baseball cards that are worth something. But most of them aren't. So you really want to look at the older cards. You can tell them by looking at them. By the year on their back, by the year that's on their back. Like 1958. So this would be a 1959 probably, baseball card. This is the card of all cards, a Mickey Mantle card. So you want to look for cards that are older, and you can tell by looking at the back. And you want to look for cards that are in good condition. But if they're newer cards remember, new cards, comic books, whatever it may be. The printed zillions and trillions and millions of them. So there are a few isolated cards and they're popular, based on who the athlete is. So, those are good but you know, sometimes boxes of those cards are worth a few dollars so you just don't want to start collecting those because then, like me, you will have box after box in your garage, of cards that you do not know what to do with. So you'll probably donate them to a children's organization and you'll probably be out whatever you spent for those cards and you will probably not feel good about it. So, when you're looking at baseball cards, look at age is everything and player quality, popularity. Don't buy new cards.

Collecting Ads

Community Members who...

  • Favorited this Video
  • Rated This Video

Check out what people are watching now
left_arrow right_arrow