So there were premium brands, ultra premium after that, but what came next? Post-premium, neo-ultra premium? These are very nice looking cards, but what turned me away from cards at the time were companies that had different levels in various sets they produced. All I could think was that the company was telling you they were selling you their crappy cards if you bought anything other than their most expensive cards. I had this idea that a single company should decide what they think a sport card should be, a very shiny very expensive one, a card that should be enjoyed by the masses and therefore simpler and cheaper, and then that company should just do that and only that.
SP is a high brand?
It is referred to as an Ultra Premium brand, which means better than Upper Deck but a step below SPX. Great to collect, but don't break the bank.
@@sportscardprofessor thanks
So there were premium brands, ultra premium after that, but what came next? Post-premium, neo-ultra premium? These are very nice looking cards, but what turned me away from cards at the time were companies that had different levels in various sets they produced. All I could think was that the company was telling you they were selling you their crappy cards if you bought anything other than their most expensive cards. I had this idea that a single company should decide what they think a sport card should be, a very shiny very expensive one, a card that should be enjoyed by the masses and therefore simpler and cheaper, and then that company should just do that and only that.
@10:41 I disagree, these rookie cards are ugly (especially for an SP card).
I guess I'm just a sucker for that copper color.