Scott C.
My blogs
Blogs I follow
- Kimaloo’s Weblog
- 30-year old Cardboard
- A Cardboard Problem
- A Pack A Day
- A Weekly Dose of Architecture Books
- Achiever Card Blog
- bdj610's Topps Baseball Card Blog
- BeanBall
- Boxbusters
- Capewood's Collections
- Cardboard Junkie
- Cardboard Mania
- Cards in the Attic
- Cleveland Baseball Cards
- Dave and Adam's Sports Card Blog - News and Information on Sports Cards.
- Dezeen
- Dinged Corners
- Dropped Third Strike
- Fielder's Choice Baseball Card Blog
- FOR LOVE of THE CARDS
- Free Andy LaRoche
- garvey cey russell lopes
- Goose Joak
- Hand Collated
- Heartbreaking Cards of Staggering Genius
- Houston Card Collector
- Nachos Grande: A Baseball Card Blog
- Night Owl Cards
- Number 5 Type Collection
- Old School Breaks
- PunkRockPaint
- Saints of the Cheap Seats
- Sports Card Blog
- Sports Cards Uncensored
- Sports.Cards.Life.
- Stale Gum
- Stats on the Back
- Surviving Grady
- The Baseball Card Blog
- The Easy Life
- The House of Cardboard
- The Topps Archives
- The Ugly Baseball Card Blog
- The Writer's Journey
- Things Done To Cards
- Thoughts and Sox
- Trader Crack's Card Blog
- Treasure Never Buried
- wait 'til next year
- Wax Breaker
- Wax Heaven
- Wax Pack Pastime
- Waxaholic
- White Sox Cards
Gender | Male |
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Industry | Architecture |
Occupation | Architect |
Location | Elmira, NY, United States |
Introduction | I started collecting baseball cards in 1982, and am probably one of the few people with nostalgic feelings towards that year's Fleer set. By the early 90's I was collecting cards from all four major sports. I quit collecting in 1993 for a number of reasons - oversaturation, inserts and parallels, price. The fact that high school girls think baseball cards are totally uncool had nothing to do with it! 15 years later I'm married and have kids. While shopping with the family recently I spotted some blasters of Topps cards and felt the pull of my addiction once again. I bought a couple of packs that day and many more since. I've pulled out the old dusty shoeboxes (yes, much of my collection really was in shoeboxes) and have started rediscovering my childhood collection. |