Waaaayyyyyy back in 1985, when I was in 7th grade, my friends (well, the dudes I sat with in art class) and I started this sort of club called Cabbage Patch Killers, which was born out of distaste for Cabbage Patch Kids. This led to us spending an inordinate amount of class time drawing pictures of Cabbage Patch Kids in various forms of mutilation, like slashed to pieces by Freddy Krueger or flattened with tire marks across them where they had been run over in the street. We thought we were so clever. It also occurs to me that my art teacher in 7th grade really didn't pay any attention to us whatsoever.
So imagine the mind-blowing moment when another kid in class (not a member of the GPK) brought in a stack of garbage Pail Kids cards! We instantly decided that we were all geniuses and had our thumbs firmly upon the pulse of the American satirical zeitgeist.
Needless to say, I spent the next couple of years collecting Garbage Pail Kids cards like there was no tomorrow. And here's five of them that always stuck in my head...
1. Jay Decay - In many ways, this one was probably my number one favorite. Zombies are awesome and the artwork on this one is stunning.
2. Reese Pieces - This one will forever stick into my memory because this is the card most given to me by other people. So many kids in my school thought that they were the first person to put together the fact that my name (although spelled differently) was the same name on this card. Eventually I would end up with about a 3 inch tall stack of nothing but this card.
3. Roy Bot - Part little kid doll, part transformer. All Awesome.
4. Savage Stuart - Even back in 7th grade, I was a massive Conan fan and this card always reminded me of my favorite Son of Cimmeria. Crom!
5. Charlotte Web - Sometimes known as "Didi T", this card was always one of my favorites due to the sheer horror I felt when I thought of a giant black widow spider with a human baby face. *shudder*
That's it for this week! Another Top 5 list will be posted next Friday!
Showing posts with label Trading Cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trading Cards. Show all posts
Friday, November 16, 2012
Monday, November 5, 2012
These Vintage Skateboarding Stickers are Totally Rad!
I mentioned back in my latest Horde Address that the great Shawn Robare (from Branded in the 80s) sent me a little care package full of all kinds of goodies. Each item in the box deserves (and will eventually get) its own post, but one of the items in the package is so unbelievably awesome, that I just couldn't wait to blog about them.
As I was going through the box that Shawn sent, I stopped dead in my tracks when I saw these beautiful vintage skateboarding trading card stickers...
What a stunning slice of pop culture history we have here. From a designer's standpoint alone, the retro graphics on these cards are a lesson in 70s style. And each card is like a little time capsule offering up a taste of what the skateboard boom of the 70s was like, at least in the mainstream view.
It's all I have in me to not go and get the above image tattooed on my chest.
Looking through these cards (which are actually stickers, much like Wacky Packages or Garbage Pail Kids), I'm thinking that these are from around the late 70s. I'm mostly basing this on the style of the images, the groovy sayings that are on some of them. If so, then they are possibly just pre-Dogtown takeover, or just completely ignoring the whole radical California boom that skateboarding experienced once legends like Tony Alva and Stacy Peralta hit the scene.
One bit that was pretty interesting, however, was the card shown below declaring that skateboarding should be made an Olympic event in 1984. If these cards were made int he late 70s, why not say 1980? Are these possibly made post-1980? If so, I'd venture to say that the graphics were probably a little out of date by then.
Another clue about the date of these cards lies in the brief biographies of various champion skaters of the day that are on the backs of each card. The latest date I could find on any of these was 1977. And let's face it, these pictures look pretty groovy.
Anyway, I just love stuff like this and can't thank Shawn enough! Looking at these cards has me looking forward to warmer weather up here in the Pacific Northwest when I can strap on the pads, grab my deck and glide over a little concrete once again.
As I was going through the box that Shawn sent, I stopped dead in my tracks when I saw these beautiful vintage skateboarding trading card stickers...
What a stunning slice of pop culture history we have here. From a designer's standpoint alone, the retro graphics on these cards are a lesson in 70s style. And each card is like a little time capsule offering up a taste of what the skateboard boom of the 70s was like, at least in the mainstream view.
It's all I have in me to not go and get the above image tattooed on my chest.
Looking through these cards (which are actually stickers, much like Wacky Packages or Garbage Pail Kids), I'm thinking that these are from around the late 70s. I'm mostly basing this on the style of the images, the groovy sayings that are on some of them. If so, then they are possibly just pre-Dogtown takeover, or just completely ignoring the whole radical California boom that skateboarding experienced once legends like Tony Alva and Stacy Peralta hit the scene.
One bit that was pretty interesting, however, was the card shown below declaring that skateboarding should be made an Olympic event in 1984. If these cards were made int he late 70s, why not say 1980? Are these possibly made post-1980? If so, I'd venture to say that the graphics were probably a little out of date by then.
Another clue about the date of these cards lies in the brief biographies of various champion skaters of the day that are on the backs of each card. The latest date I could find on any of these was 1977. And let's face it, these pictures look pretty groovy.
Anyway, I just love stuff like this and can't thank Shawn enough! Looking at these cards has me looking forward to warmer weather up here in the Pacific Northwest when I can strap on the pads, grab my deck and glide over a little concrete once again.
Friday, June 22, 2012
Top 5 Friday: Trading Cards from the '80s
What kid growing up in the '80s didn't collect trading cards? Even if you weren't an avid collector, you still ended up with a few packs worth of cards every now and then. In my school and neighborhood, trading cards were practically legal tender in our kid world. If one kid had a pack of Pop Tarts, you could get one of those Pop Tarts from him for 4 Superman cards. I once managed to get a whole shoebox of Return of the Jedi figures in exchange for a healthy stack of baseball cards. And we even once coaxed another kid into eating an earthworm for a Mean Joe Green card. I know, we were horrible.
Anyway, I was a full-blown trading card addict as a kid, amassing several boxes full of cards based on movies, cartoons and (occasionally) sports. So I thought it would be fun to list my top 5 favorite trading cards series that I was pretty much always willing to drop some lawn-mowing money on.
Most of these aren't going to be shocking to any of you, but here they are nonetheless.
1. Empire Strikes Back
Now, most of you are probably wondering why I didn't list the Star Wars series of cards, and I did own a metric crap-ton of those, but it was the ESB cards that saw my most fevered bout of collecting mania, and also represented my very first foray into trying to collect every single card in the series, which I eventually managed to do. Also, the ESB cards were just gorgeous, with their frames designed to look like brushed metal and their legendary "letter" cards.
2. Raiders of the Lost Ark
This is another card series that I battled and won in my efforts to complete the series. Sadly, I think I was about the only kid in my neighborhood that was crazy about these cards, so I never really had anyone to trade with. So I was on my own, and I bet if I had kept track, I probably single-handedly bought the entire box of these wax packs down at Bailey's Pharmacy all from bottle and can return money.
3. E.T.
At the other end of the spectrum to the lack of interest in the Raiders cards in my neighborhood and school, pretty much every kid I knew was crazy for E.T. cards. One of the best things about these cards is that we often found those big, long packs of E.T. cards, where you got like 30 cards or something, which some math-minded kid in our school figured out made the cards cheaper if bought that way, and of course, helped you complete your collection faster.
4. Garbage Pail Kids
These cards represent the trading cards that I probably collected for the longest period of time. These were an absolute phenomenon in middle school and every kid I knew collected them. I remember being sneered at by the cooler kids in 7th grade while we nerds huddled around our 3-ring binders packed full of Garbage Pail Kids cards (technically stickers, but you only stuck your doubles on stuff, and only then if they weren't good trade fodder). I would collect these cards all through 7th, 8th and even into 9th grade. Later, in my 20s, I would start to hunt down the other cards I missed in my teen years and thanks to their resurgence, I even bought a few packs recently. My love for these cards will probably never end.
5. Topps Baseball Cards
I know, I know, I wasn't exactly the biggest sports lover as a kid, but for some reason, especially through my Little League years, it seemed like an American rite of passage to collect baseball cards. Growing up in Michigan, me and my friends were often scrambling to be the first to collect every one of the Detroit Tigers team cards and that reached a fever pitch in '84 when the Tigers beat the Padres in the World Series.
The reason I specifically chose Topps brand baseball cards is because, for some reason, when we were kids, we all got it in our heads that only jerks and idiots collected Fleer. Don't ask me why. I have no idea where that came from.
Thanks for checking out my list. Another Top 5 will hit the blog next Friday! See you there
Anyway, I was a full-blown trading card addict as a kid, amassing several boxes full of cards based on movies, cartoons and (occasionally) sports. So I thought it would be fun to list my top 5 favorite trading cards series that I was pretty much always willing to drop some lawn-mowing money on.
Most of these aren't going to be shocking to any of you, but here they are nonetheless.
1. Empire Strikes Back
Now, most of you are probably wondering why I didn't list the Star Wars series of cards, and I did own a metric crap-ton of those, but it was the ESB cards that saw my most fevered bout of collecting mania, and also represented my very first foray into trying to collect every single card in the series, which I eventually managed to do. Also, the ESB cards were just gorgeous, with their frames designed to look like brushed metal and their legendary "letter" cards.
2. Raiders of the Lost Ark
This is another card series that I battled and won in my efforts to complete the series. Sadly, I think I was about the only kid in my neighborhood that was crazy about these cards, so I never really had anyone to trade with. So I was on my own, and I bet if I had kept track, I probably single-handedly bought the entire box of these wax packs down at Bailey's Pharmacy all from bottle and can return money.
3. E.T.
At the other end of the spectrum to the lack of interest in the Raiders cards in my neighborhood and school, pretty much every kid I knew was crazy for E.T. cards. One of the best things about these cards is that we often found those big, long packs of E.T. cards, where you got like 30 cards or something, which some math-minded kid in our school figured out made the cards cheaper if bought that way, and of course, helped you complete your collection faster.
4. Garbage Pail Kids
These cards represent the trading cards that I probably collected for the longest period of time. These were an absolute phenomenon in middle school and every kid I knew collected them. I remember being sneered at by the cooler kids in 7th grade while we nerds huddled around our 3-ring binders packed full of Garbage Pail Kids cards (technically stickers, but you only stuck your doubles on stuff, and only then if they weren't good trade fodder). I would collect these cards all through 7th, 8th and even into 9th grade. Later, in my 20s, I would start to hunt down the other cards I missed in my teen years and thanks to their resurgence, I even bought a few packs recently. My love for these cards will probably never end.
5. Topps Baseball Cards
I know, I know, I wasn't exactly the biggest sports lover as a kid, but for some reason, especially through my Little League years, it seemed like an American rite of passage to collect baseball cards. Growing up in Michigan, me and my friends were often scrambling to be the first to collect every one of the Detroit Tigers team cards and that reached a fever pitch in '84 when the Tigers beat the Padres in the World Series.
The reason I specifically chose Topps brand baseball cards is because, for some reason, when we were kids, we all got it in our heads that only jerks and idiots collected Fleer. Don't ask me why. I have no idea where that came from.
Thanks for checking out my list. Another Top 5 will hit the blog next Friday! See you there
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Vintage Garbage Pail Kids Giant Stickers!
This past Sunday, I headed out to my favorite bi-annual vintage toy show that takes place right here in scenic Seattle, Washington every April and October. I always come away with some cool stuff and this time around was especially epic in regards to my toy haul. So, expect to see several posts about all of my loot from this show for the next few days.
One of the finds that isn't exactly a toy, but simply radiates a warm miasma of nostalgia nonetheless are these absolutely pristine packs of Garbage Pail Kids Giant Stickers from 1986. These hail from a time when I, like all of my friends, we downright crazy about collecting Garbage Pail Kids stickers and I have a vivid memory of one of my best friends back then buying a couple of packs of these and him giving me one that had an image of a see-through kid that said It Takes Guts to be a Garbage Pail Kid, which I promptly unpeeled and slapped onto the dead-center front of my drawing folder (basically a Trapper Keeper folder with all of my loose sheets of artwork in it).
The guy I bought them from sold them to me for a whole buck a piece, and considering that they were that price in 1986, that's not a bad deal.
The stickers are basically postcard sized reproductions of some of their more popular artwork with added corny jokes. To be honest, most of these are total groaners and I think they should have just reprinted the cards as they were in the larger format and kids would have still been stoked.
By the way, anyone remember those GPK buttons? Man, I had like 6 of those on my backpack in 8th grade.
The are definitely cool and all, and totally worth the $2 I paid for both packs, but the one thing that made this purchase an epic score was when I was fanning through the second pack I opened to find this baby...
BOO-YA! Nostalgia BOMB!
One of the finds that isn't exactly a toy, but simply radiates a warm miasma of nostalgia nonetheless are these absolutely pristine packs of Garbage Pail Kids Giant Stickers from 1986. These hail from a time when I, like all of my friends, we downright crazy about collecting Garbage Pail Kids stickers and I have a vivid memory of one of my best friends back then buying a couple of packs of these and him giving me one that had an image of a see-through kid that said It Takes Guts to be a Garbage Pail Kid, which I promptly unpeeled and slapped onto the dead-center front of my drawing folder (basically a Trapper Keeper folder with all of my loose sheets of artwork in it).
The guy I bought them from sold them to me for a whole buck a piece, and considering that they were that price in 1986, that's not a bad deal.
The stickers are basically postcard sized reproductions of some of their more popular artwork with added corny jokes. To be honest, most of these are total groaners and I think they should have just reprinted the cards as they were in the larger format and kids would have still been stoked.
By the way, anyone remember those GPK buttons? Man, I had like 6 of those on my backpack in 8th grade.
The are definitely cool and all, and totally worth the $2 I paid for both packs, but the one thing that made this purchase an epic score was when I was fanning through the second pack I opened to find this baby...
BOO-YA! Nostalgia BOMB!
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Trading Cards! Superman II
I have to admit that when I was a kid, I liked Superman II way more than the first Superman. Don't get me wrong, despite my dislike for the character in the comics, I somehow managed to differentiate the moive version of the Man of Steel and thought the first movie was the bee's knees when I saw it with my dad, brother and grandpa on Christmas Eve of 1978. But it was the second movie that I watched over and over on HBO, even through the stupid moments like him peeling off his S symbol and throwing it like a sheet of red and yellow cling wrap. Maybe I can chalk most of my love for this movie up to Ursa. Yeah... it was all about Ursa.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Trading Cards! Magnum P.I.!
What's there to say about Magnum P.I. trading cards? I mean... they're Magnum P.I. trading cards. Behold their awesomeness...
Monday, October 17, 2011
Trading Cards! 1989 Batman Movie Cards!
I have been a dyed-in-the-wool Bat-fan since I first saw the '60s TV show when I was three, and my fandom fluctuated over the years, with the typical hills and valleys that come with any life-long interest. But in 1989, with the release of Tim Burton's first Batman film and having been introduced to comics such as Frank Miller's Dark Knight Returns shortly before that, my Bat-fervor was reignited with abandon.
So, even though I was 16 years old at the time, that didn't stop me from buying up several packs of Batman movie trading cards back in the day, and I managed to score a couple of fresh packs during my Chicago visit last month, just for old-time's sake.
And yes, they still had the gum inside.
So, even though I was 16 years old at the time, that didn't stop me from buying up several packs of Batman movie trading cards back in the day, and I managed to score a couple of fresh packs during my Chicago visit last month, just for old-time's sake.
And yes, they still had the gum inside.
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Trading Cards! ALF Edition!
Okay, I gotta be honest; I wasn't exactly the biggest ALF fan when I was a kid. I liked ALF himself, and even bought a few of his comic books, and may have secretly wanted a plush ALF of my very own, but even at the tender age that I was when this show came out, I knew crap when I saw it.
The dad gave me the creeps. And the daughter was a horrible actor. Just sayin'.
Still, that didn't stop me from grabbing a fresh pack of ALF cards recently. But, what's up with only giving us 5 cards and a sticker? Remember when you'd get like 10 cards? Anyway, check 'em out...
The dad gave me the creeps. And the daughter was a horrible actor. Just sayin'.
Still, that didn't stop me from grabbing a fresh pack of ALF cards recently. But, what's up with only giving us 5 cards and a sticker? Remember when you'd get like 10 cards? Anyway, check 'em out...
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Trading Cards! Superman II Edition!
I'm not gonna lie. I love Superman II more than the first Superman movie. Despite the idiotic moments like him throwing a plastic sheet-like "S" symbol that he just peeled off his chest. (Seriously... WTF?!) I think it probably has a lot to do with Sarah Douglas. My love for that movie, that is.
Anyway, I recently scored some Superman II cards, still sealed in their waxpack and thought I'd take a couple of pics. Can't you just smell the bubblegum?
Anyway, I recently scored some Superman II cards, still sealed in their waxpack and thought I'd take a couple of pics. Can't you just smell the bubblegum?
Monday, September 19, 2011
Trading Cards! A-Team Edition
During my recent visit to Chicago, I swung by one of my favorite shops that I used to frequent in hopes that it a) was still there, and b) still carried a selection of vintage trading card wax packs like they used to. Luckily I got an affirmative on both counts. I didn't waste time snatching up several packs, sort of a cornucopia of various packs, for the sole purpose of opening them, strolling down memory lane and then posting them here.
So, in short, expect a lot of trading card posts for a little while.
I pity the fool who doesn't like today's installment!
So, in short, expect a lot of trading card posts for a little while.
I pity the fool who doesn't like today's installment!
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