what is the value of a 1989 fleer barry bonds baseball card?
Aug 20, 2007 by Josh C | Posted in Baseball
Retard Larry Fritsch Cards, the World's #1 Sports Cards Catalog.
P.I. Stingray | Aug 20, 2007
Not that much. Probabley like $1.00 or a tiny more. It's not an extremely rare card.
sean262 | Aug 20, 2007
Chips Larry Fritsch Cards, the World's #1 Sports Cards Catalog.
P.I. Stingray | Aug 20, 2007
I would reflect on about $.75-$1.00 I know like me, you probably thought~"Wow a Barry Bonds card in 1989!. It must be good alot of money.Right!?"~But It is most likely that price beacause its not rare at all i would thing about at least 700 copies if it was a Topps it would be around $1.00 so Fleer would be cheaper.
A 1987 Topps Bonds is selling for $24.95 on Amazon
Mark O | Aug 20, 2007
I Need quotes on my baseball cards from 1989 to 1994?
Jan 02, 2008 by De Milow "Dee" Chatman | Posted in Card Games
1.Armies;Dream Team(1991); Roberto Alomar; Card #887
2.Score;Rifleman(1991);Benny Santiago; Credit card #416
3.Score;Richard "Rich" Rodriguez(1991); Card #593
4.Donruss; Andy Hawkins(1989); Car-card #583
5.Donruss; chris Gwynn(1992); Card #648
6.Topps; Richard "Rich" Rodriguez(1991); Show-card #573
7.Fleer; Palyer of the Decade(1990); Fernando Valenzuela;Card #622
8.MLBP, MVP series(1991); Nolan Ryan; gatherer pin and card(STILL IN ORIGINAL PACKAGING)!!!
9. Donruss; Mike Scioscia(1991); Card #480
10. Fleer; Mike Davis(1990); Playing-card #391
11. Donruss; Richard "Rich" Rodriguez(1991); Card #769
12. Donruss; Ricky Bones(1992); Postal card #545
13. Score; Thomas Howard(1992); Card #293
14. Score; Alfredo Griffin(1992); Card #254
15. Donruss; Diamond Kings(1990); Roberto Alomar
16. Talent; Eric Plunk(1992); Card #198
17. Flair; kenny Lofton(1992); Card #195
18. The Leaf Set 2; Roger Clemens(1993); Christmas card #279
19. The Leaf Set 2; Brett Butler(1993); Card #230
20. The Leaf Set 2; Wade Boggs(1993);#285
Nolan Ryan pin might be merit something but the rest aren't that valuable
ur mother | Jan 02, 2008
I have some Barry Bonds baseball cards. Wondering about their value?
Aug 08, 2007 by galatamous pig | Posted in Baseball
I have the 1987 Donruss and Fleer roockie cards, the Donruss is include 361, the fleer number 604. I also have a 1988 Score card number 12 of 40. I have 2 1988 Donruss cards, numbers 17 and 326. I've got a 1988 Fleer dance-card, number 322, a 1988 Topps, number 450, a 1988 Score card, number 265 of 660. I also have a 1989 Donruss, army 92, a 1990 Topps, number 220. I have a 1990 Bowman, number 181, a 1990 Topps bevy 220. My last card, a 1989 Donruss, number 92. Thanks a lot!
I'll recite say you the same thing I tell everybody else that asks how much a certain players cards are. Go to a bookstore and buy yourself a Beckett Baseball price guide. That is the first way to idea of the value of the cards are.
It's great that you gave year, manufacturer and card number but can't give correct info without knowing the condition of the cards. Like I said go out and spend the 4 dollars on a Baseball Beckett.
deadhead | Aug 08, 2007
What is the best method for selling my baseball card collection?
Oct 04, 2008 by Joey W | Posted in Hobbies & Crafts
I sedate baseball cards in the late 1980's. I have rookie cards and series for 1987, 1988, 1989 (Fleer sets,Topps Donruss sets, 1989 Native sealed Upper Deck set -rookie cards - Ken Griffey Jr. Barry Bonds Mark McGuire - and much more. How should I sell it? One lot at a index card show? Ebay? Local City? I need to unload this large commodity, but I want to maximize my earnings. How would you rat on it?
get it appraised first, so you certain that you aren't being gypped. then, try a fair or something. depending on what the appraiser says, you can decide to sell them individually or as a collection.
you're lucky I'm nice | Oct 04, 2008
Top 7 Depressingly Cheap Baseball Cards
The greatest day of the month as an 11-year old was coming place to a new Beckett Baseball Card Monthly in your mailbox. Who was on the cover? What went up? What went down? Who’s the Hottest and Coldest instrumentalist? What lies will readers tell in Autograph Experiences? The worst lie, though, was not ever being told that “present up” really means nothing, and what a card is “worth” was quite different than what was in the Beckett. Never is that more express than if you cruise E Bay now and see how much your favorite “expensive” cards go for. It’s unbelievably depressing.
7. Ken Griffey Jr. 1989 Higher up Deck
This one used to “book” (love that baseball card price guide slang) for $100, and you can find a new one for under ten bucks. It’s really a bit refreshing that this one still goes for even that, many cards are way more depressing to check as you will see. There is still an aura around the Griffey card, which is probably why it still costs something: most underappreciated sportswoman of this generation; the first “high-end” set (which ended up making cards not as fun anymore); the first card of the first “high-end” set; for all time a super-hyped rookie who actually panned out. It may be the most famous card of the peak of collecting that didn’t catch up in curse words on a bat.
6. 1991 Topps Stadium Club
If 1989 Upper Deck was the first “high-end” set, Topps Colosseum Club was the first “ungodly high-end” set. They started out at $4 per pack for 12 cards, and once their repute grew, they sometimes cost $8 or even higher. I remember being at a card show where a guy was selling them at $4 during its peak, and kids were lined up to buy them like guys waiting for Neon Beaudeau in Down in the mouth Chips. It was a really cool set—each player’s Topps rookie card was shown on the back, Nolan Ryan and Ozzie Smith were in tuxes, and Unabashed Thomas had the most sought-after card. You can now buy the entire set on E Bay for an opening bid of…five dollars. Good God. That’s a lot of lawns mowed for nothing.
But the monopoly at the last moment ended when Donruss and Fleer secured licenses in 1981, and more manufacturers equaled more cards, which in turn equaled more collectors. Sets such as the 1984 Fleer Update became immense successes, with the rookie cards of players and more »
One constituent most collectors would admit is that gave the concept of premium cards a huge boost when it introduced its first set of baseball cards in 1989, and the reaction to that identification product changed the landscape of the hobby forever.