1969 was the last year of the 3 x 12 rak pak arrays. Starting in 1959, when three 12 card cello packs were overwrapped for point of sale purchase displays, Topps had stuck with this winning formula for over a decade. But 1969 was the last year of many Topps pricing schemes; 1970 would bring a shift to larger and more expensive packaging across all lines.
The 1969 raks are essentially the same as the 68's:
That NEW tag stayed with the 69's; can't go wrong with a good thing! You can really see how loose the cards would get inside each pocket. Football was again a match for baseball:
The only real changes in the header card from 1968 to '69 would have been to the Topps production code (a very helpful dating tool) and at some point in the year a switch from Brooklyn to Duryea as the place of manufacture: I need to find clearer scans to determine when they did this on the raks; it was about the the time the fifth series baseball cards were issued but if they had old stock showing Brooklyn, they may well have let it run out unless there was a compelling business reason not to. The baseball and football raks above came from Huggins & Scott's site.
Once again the hockey cards also came in raks (just Topps I think, not OPC):
As with almost all my tough hockey scans, that is from Bobby Burrell's fabulous Vintage Hockey Collector's Price Guide. Hockey raks would have been produced in tiny numbers relative to baseball and even football. Remember, if you are buying these off eBay, watch for fakes-there are far more of those and repackaged "Christmas" raks than legitimate ones out there.
4 comments:
the hockey one is really nice
When the shift to new packaging was made what happened in 1971. Some of the packs have the normal Topps header card, while today we see examples using a regular 1971 Topps card as the header?
Why did Topps do this?
More coming soon on Raks. Stay tuned!
yeah, what Matthew said!!!!!! Mister Hockey AND Bobby Hull on top of the hockey pack...FOR THE WIN!!!!!!
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