TTG from "Friars on Cardboard" has been very good to me in the past.
He's been good to me again...with these guys showing up in my mailbox on....May 1st. So...I'm a little delayed, no biggie. I'll just pop over to the FoC blog to leave a comment and let him know I'm really appreciate it.
Blog not found???
You know it's been awhile since you posted when a blog shuts down in between the time you get the cards and when you post them. It looks like he's doing all his posting at gaslampball.com now. I know "Gas Lamp" is the SD district, but I like to picture the Padres playing all their games with flaming spheres of gas that explode upon being hit. You'd get a lot fewer Home-Runs that way....but the opposing infielders would all be really scared.
But I digress...here's the oddballs he sent me!
I've seen the "Rub Downs" before, but the "Pro Stamps" were completely new to me. Thanks again, sir!
Showing posts with label Friars on Cardboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friars on Cardboard. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Thursday, January 3, 2013
A Hand-Written Friendship Bracelet
When I was in 2nd grade, if you were buddies with someone you would give them a friendship bracelet. You'd get a couple of pieces of colored-string, braid them together, and BOOM -- instant friendship. It was a personal gift that took some time and care, which is part of what made it mean something.
Now in the internet age, much is made of the "lost art of the hand-written letter." With all the IMing, emailing, facebooking, and twittering, actually sitting down with a pen and paper and sending someone a personalized note counts as the height of graceful manners.
Relating this to the blogosphere...I'll admit that I am guilty of sending "impersonal" trade packages. Maybe I'll just drop a team-bag into a bubble mailer and send it off. If I'm lucky, I might offer a perfunctory "Thanks for trading!" on a slip of paper that I toss into the envelope.
So.....if the quality scale goes from short boilerplate email (bad) to hand-written letter plus friendship bracelet (very good), how can I possibly place a ranking on THIS?
This is by far one of the coolest things I have received from the card-blog world. It's from TTG @ Friars on Cardboard. It is a hand-collated pack of manager cards, wrapped in white paper, and then decorated with the cover art seen above. If a hand-written item is notable...what can I say about a hand-drawn pack? AWESOME is what I can say. Keep in mind that this whole thing is the size of a regular baseball card and done in ink. And this was a "Just Because" package...no trade was involved.
And with that preview...I was hoping the pack would contain that top card. IT DID.
There were several other manager cards from TTG (many of them grumpy, per my preferences), but this was my favorite. It's a double-dose of grumpitude.
Although I didn't know it, not only do I collect grumpy manager cards, apparently I also collect grumpy manager STICKERS.
Another package from TTG had several Royals I needed, including Jeff Conine jumping rope with the old crossover technique. Thanks to 4th grade P.E. class, I can do that same trick. Maybe I should send that teacher a hand-written note of thanks?
Speaking of elementary school, Sherman Corbett and I had the same glasses, apparently.
This exceeded anything I could have hoped for, TTG. Thank you so much. Know that I appreciate it a ton -- This hand-written friendship bracelet of a pack. :-)
Now in the internet age, much is made of the "lost art of the hand-written letter." With all the IMing, emailing, facebooking, and twittering, actually sitting down with a pen and paper and sending someone a personalized note counts as the height of graceful manners.
Relating this to the blogosphere...I'll admit that I am guilty of sending "impersonal" trade packages. Maybe I'll just drop a team-bag into a bubble mailer and send it off. If I'm lucky, I might offer a perfunctory "Thanks for trading!" on a slip of paper that I toss into the envelope.
So.....if the quality scale goes from short boilerplate email (bad) to hand-written letter plus friendship bracelet (very good), how can I possibly place a ranking on THIS?
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Gene Mauch |
This is by far one of the coolest things I have received from the card-blog world. It's from TTG @ Friars on Cardboard. It is a hand-collated pack of manager cards, wrapped in white paper, and then decorated with the cover art seen above. If a hand-written item is notable...what can I say about a hand-drawn pack? AWESOME is what I can say. Keep in mind that this whole thing is the size of a regular baseball card and done in ink. And this was a "Just Because" package...no trade was involved.
And with that preview...I was hoping the pack would contain that top card. IT DID.
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1987 Topps Gene Mauch |
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Buck Showalter and Jim Fregosi |
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2012 Triple Play Sticker - Screaming Manager - #8 |
Speaking of elementary school, Sherman Corbett and I had the same glasses, apparently.
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1989 Topps Sherman Corbett, 1990 Topps Mike Scott |
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