Free Baseball Card Value Guide Knowledge Base
where can i find a free guide for the card value average or book worth? i have alot of old cards from 78' up. i have mork and mindy , star wars, balltlestar gallactica , hulk t.v. cards , kiss , charlies angels, old baseball and football cards ....ozzie smith when he was a padre. mean joe green , roger staubach , terry bradshaw , kareem abdul jabbar and even a big 94' emmit smith action packed mammoth card still in plastic. i would guess i have over 10,000 cards that are mostly from 1978 to 1984.
Good free baseball card pricing guide? I have two baseball cards that have no marks on them except for the names of the players and "made in the USA" on the bottom right hand corner. They are both in black and white. They also have no stats or anything on the back, but are made of cardboard. One is of Whitey Ford and the other is of Gil Hodges. I've tried to find the selling price of them, but so far every site wants me to buy a membership to see the different prices on hundreds of cards. I really need help with this, because I'm not going to let them go without finding the real value
Value of Baseball Card? I have a 1966 World Series Game #3 L.A. vs. Balt. baseball card and I was wondering if anyone knew what it was worth or knew where I could find out what it was worth.The front of the card says "Blair's Homer Defeats L.A." I tried TuffStuff.com and couldn't find it, and Beckett.com charges money for a price guide.Does anyone know how I can find the value of the card for free?
Any good, accurate, and free online price guide for comic books? Have the stereotypical garage full of old comic books at my in laws house, and was hoping to get an idea on value for some of it. Not exactly in perfect CGC condition, I'm just curious what some of these older or random titles may pull at auction. Runs the spectrum: DC, Marvel, Star Trek, Archie, etc. Key word: free - like an old school Beckett for baseball cards.
A mountain of 60's baseball cards - evaluation? Pricing? Hi. I'm hoping someone will make my day saying that I have the possibility of having a gold mine on my hands. My dad collected sports cards religiously in the 60s. I have one of many shoeboxes of cards he owned. I estimate there to be about 400 in this box. Here's the thing - I know nothing about them, really. The best I've got as far as trading card knowledge is an extensive history with Pokémon cards. Yeah, pretty sad. I was wondering how I could value all of them? They're honestly from tons and tons of different sets - probably 65% topps. I'm afraid that a standard value book will not cover them all. I'm just very interested in the values. They're pretty much untouched since about 1974, so they're all in about the condition he first got them. Except for a few that he'd obviously traded for. But still, they don't look 35-40 years old by a long shot. Any ideas to get me started? I'm a broke high school student so I can't really afford professional evaluation. Free sites? Guides?
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