Baseball Cards

A common refrain among collectors is that there hasn’t been enough innovation from the card companies in recent years. While the 1990s saw the introduction of refractors, relic cards, and certified autographs to the collecting world, we’ve seen very little that’s really unique in the past decade. It seems that every new card product features a certain number of autographs and relic cards per box, and serial-numbered parallels featuring different colors or mini versions of the base cards.
So I think it’s praise-worthy when a card company comes up with an idea that really is innovative, and they don’t over-do it to the point that collectors quickly become bored of the idea. One such recent idea is the Topps silk card.
Honestly, my first impression of silk cards was that they were kinda lame. It’s hard to imagine the Topps product development meeting where somebody stood up and proposed making miniature versions of cards out of silk and encasing them in a hard plastic frame. But someone at Topps did indeed think of that idea, and Topps began producing silk cards for the first time in 2006 Turkey Red. Since then, they’ve expanded the concept into Allen & Ginter, T-206, and the Topps flagship set.
As silly as the idea of silk cards sounds at first, I have come to greatly appreciate them. And I think that there are two factors that contribute to their greatness: their uniqueness and their rarity.
You can’t deny that silk cards are unique. There’s really nothing else like them in the hobby. Over the years, the card companies have tried so many methods of making a card look different (foil, chrome, refractors, die cuts – just to name a few), that it’s cool to see a card that feels different. So many collectors are looking for something interesting and different to add to their collections, and silk cards definitely fill that niche. In an era when so many products are dominated by the same old single-color “relic” cards, most of which aren’t worth more than a few bucks, it’s refreshing to get a different type of “hit” in your packs. Do some searching on eBay, and you’ll find that silk cards of average players almost always sell for higher prices than plain relic cards of stars.
And then there’s the rarity. In most products that include silk cards, they are serial numbered to 50 without any parallels. I’m pretty sure that there has never been a silk card that’s had more than 99 copies. And it definitely helps that Topps has limited the amount of products that include silk cards. While you can get relic cards in just about every new card product, Topps has never produced more than three sets with silk cards in a year. And of course, Topps is the only company that has produced silk cards so far. All of these factors make silk cards truly rare, and very desirable.
