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mrmopar
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- Jan 19, 2010
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I saw a listing on ebay recently, where seller was advertising a 1993 Finest refractor that clearly was not one. The asking price was $2500, so I assume it would go through authentication and presumably wouldn't pass. I messaged the person, giving them the benefit of doubt that they just couldn't tell and weren't trying to scan, given that it probably would fail at that price point anyway. Getting some initial pushback, but I am convinced they really have no clue how to tell or possibly can't see a refractor.
This reminded me of a shop owner I used to know back in the 90s. The shop was owned by an older couple, who I believe just saw the financial opportunity in retirement to run a shop. Neither were all that knowledgable in the hobby and would often wait for Beckett to update before selling anything that wasn't already listed. Both were nice, but I preferred dealing with the wife. She would be more apt to settle on a price, where as the husband was set on waiting for an "authority" to help him price it. It was then that I learned that some people can't physically tell the difference between a refractor and a base card. Even with a refractor and base of the same exact card, in hand, she didn't see it! I thought it was weird at first, but then considering some of the other vision issues people experience, such as color blindness, it made sense. Topps would eventually start marking refractors on the backs not too long after the 93 issue, presumably because this was a larger issue than anyone had anticipated.
is there anyone here that can't see the refractor card either? I still find it a little fascinating and unfortunate at the same time, especially since missing parallels is all too common in general because of the often subtle differences that just don't catch the eye easily, such as a foil color difference, serial number or other small change between base and parallel.
This reminded me of a shop owner I used to know back in the 90s. The shop was owned by an older couple, who I believe just saw the financial opportunity in retirement to run a shop. Neither were all that knowledgable in the hobby and would often wait for Beckett to update before selling anything that wasn't already listed. Both were nice, but I preferred dealing with the wife. She would be more apt to settle on a price, where as the husband was set on waiting for an "authority" to help him price it. It was then that I learned that some people can't physically tell the difference between a refractor and a base card. Even with a refractor and base of the same exact card, in hand, she didn't see it! I thought it was weird at first, but then considering some of the other vision issues people experience, such as color blindness, it made sense. Topps would eventually start marking refractors on the backs not too long after the 93 issue, presumably because this was a larger issue than anyone had anticipated.
is there anyone here that can't see the refractor card either? I still find it a little fascinating and unfortunate at the same time, especially since missing parallels is all too common in general because of the often subtle differences that just don't catch the eye easily, such as a foil color difference, serial number or other small change between base and parallel.