Year: 2014
Affordable baseball photos great for autographing: meet Detroit’s best-kept secret (that Jim Thome knows…)
(From the artful eye of Carol Sheldon!) |
Pat Neshek is coming! Santa Claus joins the Houston Astros
Santa Junior? |
It’s not just the beard.
Autographed player postcard photos for free? How?
Bay Area photographer McWilliams found many clients on the Oakland roster. |
Ask.
I learned from baseball address pioneer Jack Smalling that he figured one out of seven requests of “if you have a photo of yourself you’d be willing to include for my collection, I’d be grateful” paid off.
And asking is free.
However, players were once so eager to please the public that they’d order their own postcard photos, footing the bill on their own.
A generation later, many retirees exhausted their postcard supply. You’ll see some thrifty former players photocopying their remaining postcard to send.
The postcards are great stories in themselves. Find a checklist online for postcards like J.D. McCarthy or McWilliams. Ask in your letter about the postcard’s history. If you can print out a black and white scan of the card (some will appear on eBay), do it. Even if you don’t get the postcard, you could get a great story.
Speaking of stories, Mr. McWilliams has one. You’d be surprised to know how many Topps cards came from his lens. His photo archive has been donated to the Hall of Fame. And he even did postcards once for ballplayer-turned-Country Western star Charley Pride.
Baseball Survivor: When writing to retirees, congratulate them on their longevity
I got hungry and happy at www.cakecentral.com. This is the place for tasty inspiration. So many artistic bakers delighting their baseball fans. But, who could bite the head off Mr. Red? |
“I never saw him play? What do I write to him about?”