Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Sheet of Japanese Baseball Cards

In Baseball > Baseball Cards > Show & Tell and Asian > Japanese Antiques > Show & Tell.
Recent Activity81 of 736Treasure from the ancestorsMy Favorite Nippon Collectible plate
2
Love it
0
Like it

ho2cultchaho2cultcha loves this.
SigPrices.comSigPrices.com loves this.
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 14 years ago

    bayareamus…
    (74 items)

    This is only serviceable picture I have of this sheet of Japanese baseball cards on display at the Society of California Pioneers, which I visited last week. Nonetheless I thought it was worth posting because it demonstrates the difference in design between these ultra-colorful cards essentially featuring cartoon heads of players, as opposed to most American cards.

    From my recent trip to the Society of California Pioneers...

    logo
    Baseball Cards
    See all
    JACKIE ROBINSON PSA 2 1948 LEAF BASEBALL #79 ROOKIE CARD RC DODGERS HOF RARE
    JACKIE ROBINSON PSA 2 1948 LEAF BAS...
    $6,700
    1955 Topps Set-Break # 47 Hank Aaron PSA 8 NM-MT
    1955 Topps Set-Break # 47 Hank Aaro...
    $2,350
    1954 TOPPS #10 JACKIE ROBINSON PSA 2
    1954 TOPPS #10 JACKIE ROBINSON PSA ...
    $277
    1960 Topps Mickey Mantle #350-PSA 8
    1960 Topps Mickey Mantle #350-PSA 8...
    $1,523
    logo
    JACKIE ROBINSON PSA 2 1948 LEAF BASEBALL #79 ROOKIE CARD RC DODGERS HOF RARE
    JACKIE ROBINSON PSA 2 1948 LEAF BAS...
    $6,700
    See all

    Comments

    1. fkw, 14 years ago
      Nice pic. These Bromides are from the 1950s and the sheets are fairly scarce overall. They usually have a lot of Japanese League Hall of Fame players. But in the US the most highly sought after cards are the ones featuring the San Francisco Seals player of the PCL on their PostWar tour of Japan in 1949. Since its hard to read Japanese for most US people, look for the "SF" hats. The SF players sell for $20-$50 ea. in most cases. There are at least 1/2 dozen different kids of bromide sets with these SF players, including some that are real pictures made by Yakyu Shonen Magazine (Youth Sports Magazine).
    2. Ralph, 13 years ago
      These particular cards are refered to as "menko" and were produced in 1949. They depict San Franciso Seals and Japanese stars at the time of the Seals historic 1949 tour of Japan (first tour after the war). "Bromides" are photographic cards sometimes refered to as "sashin menko" (photo menko). Seals tour cards are certainly desirable, though perhaps the most highly sought after cards by U.S. collectors are the 1967 Kabaya-Leaf cards.
    3. Ralph, 13 years ago
      P.S. I should clarify that "bromides" were popular in the late 1940s and 1950s and were commonly created through a photographic process where the bromide emulsion is visible.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.