The point of slabbing is exactly as Bruce writes - its designed to assure 
people new to the hobby that the cards are real and graded properly. These new 
collectors don't know Bruce or Rich, don't know how to grade lobby cards  and 
don't know who to trust. But they still are interested in collecting and 
investing. CGC has been around long enough in enough different hobbies to 
maintain credibility. 


These new collectors might be speculators and might drive up prices to amazing 
levels - but I am having a hard time thinking that's a bad thing. So slabbing 
will bring in more customers, some of who might actually become real 
collectors, drive up prices on the better material and make the dealers more 
money and the worth of collections higher. What's the objection?
If it works out like it did in comics - it actually DROPPED the prices of 
lesser material. Only the very top pieces maintained the huge "overguide" 
prices.


It does mean that the people who now are at the top of the hobby will have to 
adjust to the new reality and that means winners and losers. It will complicate 
bragging rights as well. A Collector will have a killer card, but these newbies 
won't be impressed until its slabbed and graded professionally. But its a  good 
thing to shake up move memorabila collecting once in a while (in a good not the 
Haggard way).


Adrian on the other hand does have a point - can these comic book guys be 
trusted to grade lobby cards? Some of my friends say absolutely not.  The CGC 
guys will get it spectacularly wrong in the beginning, but after a while they 
conqueror the learning curve. Then slabbing  will take off even with 
established collectors when they see their best stuff triple or quadruple in 
value.


Cory






-----Original Message-----
From: Bruce Hershenson <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Jul 1, 2010 6:15 am
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Slabbed Lobby Cards at Heritage


I too hate slabbing, especially on comic books where it makes them unreadable. 
Why not start slabbing particularly fine examples of food, so it will become 
un-eatable?

But here is how it will likely go:

An unnamed auction house or two will start auctioning more and more of these 
monstrosities. They will auction for two to ten times the regular prices (we 
will never see the high bidders, so we won't know if the results are real, or 
if it is a house bidder "buying" from themselves).

But people will want in on this "free money". and they will start submitting 
their own lobbies to be slabbed, and for a while they will get great results, 
and that will encourage them to slab lots more, and others will start doing the 
same.

Then an unnamed dealer will have an "all-slabbed" auction on eBay, and the 
results will be amazing, and everyone will start to sing the praises of 
slabbing (except for a few old fogies like me, Phil Edwards, Rich Halegua, and 
others) and we will quit selling lobbies altogether, and they will be purchased 
by the same investors who have overrun other hobbies, and before too much 
longer a lot of the new "collectors" will say, "I only buy slabbed lobbies, 
because I KNOW what I am getting", as if buying an item that some paid employee 
looked at for a minute is more trustworthy than buying an item from a dealer 
who has collected and bought and sold lobbies for 20 or 30 years!

At least that's how it played out in comic books, baseball cards, and coins.

Some questions:

1) WHO owns the grading service who slabs these (and if a major auction owns 
even a small percentage of them, then isn't that a massive conflict of 
interest)?
2) Every top dealer (except for one) has admitted they would have been fooled 
by the Haggard fakes, and in fact most were, and a leading restorer was fooled 
by a recreation of an ultra-expensive one-sheet. Isn't that proof that the last 
thing we need is some new people being paid to authenticate and grade lobby 
cards?
3) In other hobbies (comic books, baseball cards, and coins), slabbing has 
siphoned millions of dollars out of collector's hands, and has driven out lots 
of the collectors who have a love of the items, and brought in a lot of 
"investor" types, and has created a "bubble" in prices not unlike that seen in 
the stock market or real estate markets. Is that what we want for our hobby?

Bruce


On Thu, Jul 1, 2010 at 1:45 AM, Phil Edwards <[email protected]> wrote:


I would never bid on a slabbed anything.
The reasons are painfully obvious, aren't they?
Phil E.
 

  
----- Original Message ----- 
  
From:   JOHN REID   Vintage Movie Memorabilia 
  
To: [email protected]   
  

Sent: Thursday, July 01, 2010 1:03   PM
  
Subject: [MOPO] Slabbed Lobby Cards at   Heritage
  


  


I have been browsing through the latest Heritage   catalogue and once again it 
is very impressive. One thing that will be of   interest to many is that amount 
of "slabbed" lobby cards that appear in this   auction. A great many look to be 
sealed in some sort of plastic with a grading   by CGC whoever they may be.
  
 
  
I have never been too keen on the idea of slabbed   lobby cards and wonder what 
you guys think about them. My concerns   are:
  
 
  
    
Slabbing and grading the cards would add to the     overall cost of the cards 
and surely it would be hardly worthwhile on     lobby cards of medium value - 
say $200.00     
What materials are used when slabbing the cards?     Is the plastic and 
materials used to slab the card acid free, uv protected,     etc?     
It looks as though the plastic may be flexible     ie it could be bent or 
creased. Does slabbing protect the card from any     damage?     
How does slabbing affect framing?     
What happens if sunlight affects the card?         
If damage occurrs whilst the card is     slabbed can the card be regraded?     
How will this "trend" affect lobby cards that     have not been slabbed?     
Will the value of lobby cards be increased or     decreased by slabbing? I know 
that some collectors will prefer to have the     card in its original state and 
will avoid purchasing cards that have been     slabbed. No doubt, there will be 
others who will like the   idea.
  
 
  
Regards
  
John
  
 
  
 
  
Website: www.moviemem.com
 
JOHN REID   VINTAGE MOVIE MEMORABILIA
PO Box 92
Palm Beach
Qld   4221
Australia
  
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