Saturday, August 16, 2025
Presidential Succession Plan
Saturday, August 9, 2025
Riddle Me This
Following their move to Duryea, PA in the winter of 1966 and subsequent period of settling in, Topps started toying with the use of what are usually referred to as commodity or production codes toward the end of that year. These codes, documented, in a way, the vast majority of their output for decades thereafter. I've shown and tried to explain these here several times - perhaps haphazardly - in the past but today I'm trying to sift through the origins of these little strings of numbers, which as we all know, generally followed this kind of pattern (example taken from 1972 Baseball): 0-401-90-01-2.
Here's a closeup of the code:
The first digit represents the medium (wrapper, box, sheet) and the second two the product number (which also covered pure confectionery products, somewhat reset every year and is loosely tied to the chronological order of release within that year as well). Sometimes the code for a product issued series-by-series could slightly change. The third set of digits is for the packaging format code, while the fourth batch represents an iteration number, documenting meaningful changes in some aspect of the release such as revised retail box or pack artwork. The last, single, digit is often said to represent the year of conception but that's not entirely true. This often does tie to the year of conception (and 95% of the time, release) and can never represent a date after the release year but sometimes (there's that 5%) can signify the one before. So a set with a final digit of -2 could have been released in 1973 but not 1971.Worth noting, the annual Baseball sets have this number matching the season of release, presumably tying to some form of contractual wording with the specific league and/or player's union regarding payment of royalties.
As mentioned, thanks to another superb sussing out by Friend o'the Archive by Lonnie Cummins, this use of the commodity codes is well known in the hobby but does not match the packing date codes stamped on each shipping carton (the solution to which can be found here). So, the commodity code represents an internal green light for production as it ultimately details a "Bill of Materials" code. This was assigned and authprized by the Topps Bill of Materials manager, who (possibly) oversaw and (definitely) coordinated with such disparate departments such as Manufacturing, Engineering and Shipping but also had to dovetail with others such as Woody Gelman's New Products and Ben Solomon's Art Departments. In essence, the code was assigned when a project intended for full release was formally started and the costs associated with producing and distributing said product needed to be tracked, all of this happening once the BOM Manager gave it the thumbs up.
Some exceptions did occur. Test issues from some time in 1966 until 1973 or so were not always tracked via any kind of numbering system found on the issued boxes or wrappers. After that, Topps began using using a much shorter T code for tests. In addition, most products that were imported from abroad, such as some of the metal pin issues, and merely repackaged (and sometimes rebranded) and then sold as a Topps release (i.e. not manufactured by Topps but merely distributed instead) had no codes at all. That simply meant these projects were tracked internally via some other system. Products that contained an insert, which was another 95% situation, did not have a separate code for them, although a handful of times even that was not the case.
Of utmost interest are the annual sports releases, primarily baseball, where, as noted above, the BOM code date matches the intended season of issue. This does not always apply to some of the myriad baseball test issues roughly running from 1967 to 1971; some of those have a BOM code that predates the year of issue. A non-recurring project, such as sets timed to Valentine's Day, would usually have a code also signifying the year prior to issue, as it took several months for most of these to be prepared, tested and then tweaked for general release.
I've tried to track down the start of these codes and it seems like they all may have started with the Batman Color Photo (aka Bat Laffs set):
Check out this box bottom:
That's 454-06-1 snaking up from the bottom right corner. The expected prefix indicator digit is missing, and it's unclear what 06 refers to (probably not the year, as we shall soon see). That trailing -1 could be the iteration number, in this case the first iteration.
As for the wrappers, no code was imprinted on them. However, a revised box was used to sell the Riddler Back cards:
That's pretty much the greatest Topps box art ever! The bottom of some didn't have a code though, although to be fair it was a generic box bottom used that year for several releases:
Throwing me a little, however is this wrapper for the Riddler Backs:
That code reads: 444-01-1-6. This somewhat matches up with the cello box code for the series...
... which reads 444-046-1-6. So that's not quite there yet. By the way, there was a special Rak Pak header created for Bat Laffs:
The Riddler Backs also got one, a sure sign Topps was making bank on Batmania; it's also a thing of beauty:
The green header has no coding but the yellow one does: 444-029-1-6. It seems like -029 could refer to the pricing but I think it's just a coincidence.
At least two other sets with non-conforming codes were issued in 1966:
Green Hornet Stickers
Display Box: 466-06-1-6
Wrapper: 466-01-1-6
Lost In Space
Shipping Case: 470-10-1-6
The codes were also assigned to pure confectionery products so they are hard to fully track but Rat Patrol has to be one of the earliest ones to use the familiar cadence.
Saturday, August 2, 2025
The 21 Club?
Friend o'the Archive Steve Schnaper has been sending in some scans of anomalous doings in the 1974 Baseball set, specifically related to certain team cards deployed by Topps.
The scans started off with thIS Oakland A's card, which had a mysterious "21" printed next to the team name:
There's also a back scratch froma pen on the card that Steve advises was not applied post-factory (hard to tell if that' s another 11 or not but it's pretty sloppy either way):
The A's card was sent in to SGC and determined to be authentic and garnered a grade of 4:
Steve also says he has found a Red Sox Team card with a front dot in the same general area as the other two markings and mentioned the Pirates card has now been slabbed by SGC.
Rich Mueller at Sports Collectors Daily posted about the A's card a little while back and a friend of mine with a LOT of 1974 team cards looked through his stash to no avail; neither had ever encountered anything like these oddities before.
If anyone out there has a clue what's going on here, please reach out!
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Simply Magical
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Salad Days
My post last month about the various Topps Baseball Stars Candy and Bubble Gum lid sets elicited a response from Friend o'the Archive Keith Olbermann. He asked what the basis was for dating the first, "green-starred" proof Baseball Stars Bubble Gum set to 1972. The answer is: nothing! I've usually put quotes around the year when referring to the set, as the dating seems to stem from early dealer attempts to identify the first run of proofs with the stars in green atop the lid, since the issued set switched the "star's stars" to red.
Now, keep in mind that I soaked up tons of hobby knowledge from old price guides and reference books, bi-weekly and monthly hobby publications and many old time dealers, especially from 1981 to the early Nineties. In fact, I have several bookcases and cabinets full of them (well, not old dealers, they would collapse my shelves). So when I type "1972" in regard to the green starred set, it occurs to me that many people don't know why I do that. Related to this, when looking through numerous posts and comments in various collecting groups on social media, it's easy to see there's a big knowledge gap between people of an "uncertain" age (say those born after the Millennium, and those of a "certain" age (old coots like me but generally those born before 1975 or so) with a middle group that has some grasp of the old, paper-driven hobby eco-info-system.
I fell this is not the fault of the younger folks but rather the fallout of the migration from books to screens that is very much still ongoing. Now I realize not everybody has the space, time or means to accumulate a library of hobby books and publications and that it is, more and more in the digitally driven world, a luxury in a way. I've been accumulating printed hobby material for forty five years, a solid chunk of which was never published in any kind of quantity or widely circulated. I also saved and organized clippings from old hobby publications and auction catalogs from roughly 1981 to 2007, some of which are outdated, some of which are not. All of that stuff is pretty much entered into my brain at this point and if it isn't, I know where to look. But that's because it's all on paper (although I've been scanning and digitizing a lot of it as I have time). How then, does the younger collector of vintage items (vintage being pre-1981 to my mind but let's say pre-Millennium to be fair) today figure things out? We were all green once (that's Shakespeare kids, look it up) but it seems harder and harder to study up these days, at least to my way of thinking, and I'm hardly a luddite.
Well, there's various websites such as Trading Card Database, PSA and Sports Collectors Daily, plus old auction house online archives, eBay, subscription sites like Beckett and Card Ladder plus all the groups on Facebook, Instagram and the like. And this doesn't even get into things like Tik-Tok, vlogs and podcasts. Many of these are fine and informative sites or entertainment but it's all getting dispersed to the point there's no way to efficiently corral some of the more esoteric information on non-mainstream sets, which is not something that seems easily solvable. So I'm thinking on all of this and invite this blog's regular readers (and casual looky-loo's) to weigh in.
Meanwhile, I never really looked at the "1972" roster of Baseball Stars Bubble Gum to decode if there was, in fact, any way to date it to 1972, or nor. Mr. Olbermann has helpfully weighed in, allowing me to avoid any heavy lifting. And so...
This is the proof sheet in question and it's always been seen as an oddity; here's an ad from the much missed U-Trading Cards in Seattle, circa 1995 (with bonus goodies described):
Everybody calls them Candy Lids by the way, even though they are not, as after 1970 they held bubble gum!
Keith has sent along some illustrative scans (red circles by KO), noting:
"I love the idea that Esposito is in the debris behind Sanguillen"
"Mike Epstein was traded to Texas on November 20, 1972. That sheet was NOT produced in 1972"
"Pretty sure that's a '71 Yankees team card peeking up from under Barry Bonds and Lee May"
I'm not sure anyone has ever figured out why the underlying matte for the candy lid proofs looks like it does, maybe the fumes from mixing up Bazooka that day were too overpowering or something.
Here's a side-by-side comparison of both years, showing Dick Bosman, "1972" first, of course: