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The current record price for an individual sports card is the US$12.6 million paid for a 1952 Mickey Mantle baseball card (Topps; #311) on August 28, 2022, breaking all previous records. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] List of highest prices paid
The 1982 Topps Factory Set is rare due to J.C. Penney's failure to sell them. J.C. Penney factory sets were available in 1982 in a color box and 1983 (SKU 672–1203), 1984 (SKU 672–1641), and 1985 (SKU 672–2029) in brown boxes. From 1986 to 1992, Topps factory sets came in two designs, Retail (or Christmas) and Hobby dealer.
Rambo: First Blood Part II (Topps, 1985) RoboCop 2 (Topps, 1990) The Rocketeer (Topps, 1992) Rocky II (Topps, 1979) Rocky IV (Topps, 1985) Screen Goddesses (Futera, 1999) [note 12] Small Soldiers (Inkworks, 1998) Space Jam (Upper Deck, 1996–97) [40] Spider-Man 2 (Upper Deck, 2004) Spider-Man 3 (Rittenhouse, 2007) Spider-Man: Far From Home ...
Garbage Pail Kids is a series of sticker trading cards produced by the Topps Company, originally released in 1985 and designed to parody the Cabbage Patch Kids dolls, which were popular at the time. Each sticker card features a Garbage Pail Kid character having some comical abnormality or deformity, or suffering a terrible fate or death.
Topps produced a Stadium Club issue in 1991. 1992 proved to be a breakthrough year as far as the price of baseball cards was concerned, with the previous 50-cents per pack price being replaced by higher price points, overall higher-grade cardboard stock, and the widespread introduction of limited edition "inserts" across all product lines. 1992 ...
The black borders would return for Topps's 1985 football set and 2007 baseball set. After starting out with simple portraits, in 1954 Topps put two pictures on the front of the card – a hand-tinted 'color' close-up photo of the player's head, and the other a black-and-white full-length pose.
The Leaf brand was used from 1985 through 1988 on specially made baseball cards distributed in Canada, and in 1990 on a premium series of cards distributed in the U.S. [3] [4] Donruss expanded its Memphis plant from 256,000 square feet (23,800 m 2 ) to nearly 400,000, grew from 550 employees to 720 and continued to make trading cards and bubble ...
Many of the top selling non-sports cards were produced by Topps, including Wacky Packages (1967, 1973–1977), Star Wars (beginning in 1977) [18] and Garbage Pail Kids (beginning in 1985). [19] In 1991, Topps ceased packaging gum with their baseball cards, which many collectors preferred because their cards could no longer be damaged by gum ...