Monday, August 17, 2015

1994 Topps: My Baby's Got Gloss


1994 is the year the whole cardscape changed. After the previous year’s array of new printing techniques and entire brands built around said techniques, ’94 is when we saw those techniques applied even to regular base cards. My adolescent friends and I liked the change, but vintage fans had to watch in horror as set after set began coming out of packs beset in glossy, full-bleed, heavily befoiled modernity that could hardly be described as cardboard anymore (and most of it wasn’t). When Old Man Topps jumped on the trolley, everyone knew this was less a fad than a sea change in the industry.


Cue 1994 Topps, the first in a series of all-gloss Topps base sets that continues unbroken to this day. It’s more than just glossy – the design is more colorful and intricate than ever before. The print quality of the base card photos is the best they’d ever had (it even holds up to early Stadium Club which, if you remember, had a Kodak logo on the box), and the content of the photos themselves is as good as the collector favorite ’91 set.

Despite ’94 Topps’ overall likeability, it has some minor issues. The cursive font in the nameplate feels a little dated. I can live with that, but I have a lot of difficulty dealing with the color palette. Despite being grounded in the green of the nameplate below, the palette tends to jump between attractive, team-appropriate color fades and seemingly random colors with no point of reference in the photo. There are Yankees cards with red borders, A’s with blue borders, and Cardinals with green and yellow. I hate to admit it, but it reminds me a lot of ’92 Fleer in that way. That’s super mean because ’92 Fleer sucks. Still, the good outweighs the bad here by a huge margin.

Last month I got a whole box of this stuff for a measly sawbuck, and while I’ve decided to build sets based on box breaks in the past, it became obvious early in this break that that was not going to be the case. The cards all stuck together from age with less than half being serviceable specimens for a decent set build. Still, there were a few great moments in this break I’d like you to see.

That may be my favorite Alomar of all time.
The Maddux would have made pretty nice trade fodder if not for being so sticky. And Mark Lewis is hardly the focal point of his own base card.
Too much quirky photography to speak of in this tiny little space under the scan.
I am obsessed with meta-cards: that being cards that show other cards.
Simply one of the greatest base cards of the 90's.
A pretty decent subset with an extremely above-average checklist
This cards was the bee's knees when I was a lad

I got a nice selection of base cards and subsets out of that box, but when it comes to inserts, I only got one:


Imagine my surprise – a ’94 Finest card in a pack of ’94 Topps flagship. Turns out this isn’t so rare after all. A set of these special preview cards were randomly inserted at 1:36 packs. I’d like to have pulled a different player, but I was excited all the same. This is for trade, btw.

Let's go to the Griffeys:

1994 Topps #400

Here is a very simple but beautiful shot of the Kid in that peaceful moment when he, along with everyone else in the stadium, watches the ball float in apparent slow motion over the right field wall.
The lighting is perfect, the static field of mixed crowd in the background gives focus and singularity to Junior in the foreground, and the angle lets us see both the back of his jersey and his face gazing at what is presumably a very long fly ball. Even he looks amazed. Just a fantastic photograph.

The back gave us a reasonably nice layout with easy-to-read stats and even a blurb. The flipped-up shades photo is one of my favorite categories of Griffey photo.

Here is the third iteration of the Topps Gold Parallel:

1994 Topps #400 Gold

Unlike the gold versions of the ’92 and ’93 sets, the name and only the name is in gold foil here with the Topps Gold logo up top. In previous versions the entire nameplate was done in textured gold as opposed to just flat gold in the lettering. The look here is more modern and less garish than the Topps Gold of ’93, but I still prefer the ’92 version.

1994 Topps #388 All-Star Outfielders (w/ Lenny Dykstra)

These dual-sided All-Star cards appeared in several consecutive mid-90’s Topps sets, and it wouldn’t be the only card Griffey would share with Dykstra. I like the big lump in Lenny’s cheek here (it’s massive, like he’s chewing on a rolled-up sock), but I must admit that I did at one time have a problem with this card.

When I was young and didn’t yet think like a collector, these cards confused me because of the big “1993” emblazoned across the top of the card despite it being from the 1994 set. Similarly, the 1993 version with Griffey and Any Van Slyke reads “1992” and the one in 1995 has him with Barry Bonds and says – you guessed it – 1994. Part of me wished they would just say “All-Stars” and let us assume they were from the previous year. Whatever - it’s not as big a deal as the card’s flagrant tobacco use and tacky speckled dirt background (or is that also chewed tobacco?).

Here’s the Topps Gold version:

1994 Topps #388 All-Star Outfielders Gold (w/ Lenny Dykstra)

As subsets go, I prefer this one:

1994 Topps #606 Measures of Greatness

This subset is a veritable who’s who of mid-90’s stars, young and old. The front design here is kind of vanilla (the background of famous names and stats is pretty neat), but the back more than makes up for that. There we get one of my favorite stat boxes of the 90’s wherein we see Junior’s career stats up to this point compared with the average among all Hall of Fame outfielders. Below that we also get a career line for Stan Musial (with whom Junior’s career is often compared – they were both born in Donora, PA). Other stars in this subset got similar treatment: Frank Thomas’ numbers are set against Jimmie Foxx and Kirby Puckett’s against Joe DiMaggio. The recycled image FROM THE SAME SET (ARGHH!) is a little off-putting, but overall this is a really cool subset that I’d like to have seen more from. Oh, and the card back is purple. I like purple.

Here’s the Topps Gold version:

1994 Topps #606 Measures of Greatness Gold

1994 was also the second and final year of the massive Topps Black Gold insert:

1994 Topps Black Gold #8

I mean "massive" in that there are 44 guys in the checklist - I don't recall these ever being considered especially rare or valuable, And yet I had no idea these were such tough pulls until I checked the back of the pack. The regular cards were 1:72 packs with several partial set winners even rarer and the grandaddy ABCD set winner seeded at 1:3600. Do I need that card? Yes, I do.

In fact, the last few cards I need to complete the Griffeys of '94 Topps are all Black Gold redemption cards, so I'll just go ahead and list those here:

1994 Topps Griffey needs:

Black Gold Set AB Winner
Black Gold Set ABCD Winner

Before we get to this last thing, you should know that there were two different versions of the factory set you could buy back in '94, the retail and hobby versions. The hobby version included more Pre-Production Finest samples than the retail as well as a sealed pack of special preview cards featuring three cards of one player, those cards being each of the three biggest Topps releases of that year: Bowman, Finest, and Stadium Club. There were 45 different players for which you could pull one of these "Superstar Sampler" packs, one of which was...

1994 Topps Superstar Sampler Set (sealed)

This appears to be the rarest 1994 Topps Griffey item there is to find. I've seen loosies for sale between 15 and 30 bucks a pop, but a sealed pack is very rare, indeed. The cards within are almost indistinguishable from their regular set counterparts save for a small stamp on the back of each card that looks like this:


To be honest I only recently learned of these things' existence, and I've been checking the backs of all my '94 Stadium Club, Bowman, and Finest cards ever since. I've found zero more, but they're out there, guys. Check your stacks. In the mean time, this pack is going to remain sealed and top-loaded as long as I have anything to say about it.

Overall I'm a fan of '94 Topps. I like how they eased into modernity slower than everyone else, pretty much keeping it classic longer than anyone else did. By this time Donruss, Fleer, Upper Deck - they were all decking out every one of their base cards in foil. Topps really let the photography do the talking this year, and the result is an above-average set.

Enjoy it while it lasts, though. Any "easing" Topps was doing into the modern age was certainly done by the time the '95 set came out. That thing is nuts.

10 comments:

  1. A few things here:

    1. I remember this set pretty well, although I remember the basketball version more, as I must've been collecting basketball a bit heavier at this time. Same design.

    2. That "Measures of Greatness" Kirby Puckett caused a fight between a friend and I. We were spending the night at his lake house and when to the tiny grocery store in town. His dad each let us get a pack of Topps, and I pulled the Topps Gold version of the Puckett. My friend was pissed and didn't talk to me for the rest of the night.

    3. Those Black Gold cards will always be sweet.

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    Replies
    1. LOL - I have similar stories. You should get a dozen of that card off of COMC and give them all to your friend in a birthday card or something.

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  2. Do you have the Black Gold A winner ? Because I have one of those if you need it

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    1. I do have it - just picked it up on COMC last night, in fact. Thanks for the offer!

      The other two should prove a lot tougher.

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  3. I had the factory set of 94 Topps - it was a birthday gift from my dad. I still have most of the cards, but I broke the set up to use for trades (sent a bunch to Kevin, I think). There are plenty singles that I will keep, of course - I'm still a fan of the set.

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    1. that stupid Kevin, breaking up birthday gifts just for his precious Blue Jays collection...

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    2. Ha! I had actually broken it up years ago by trading away a few key cards from the set I wasn't interested in.

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  4. I was just looking at some 92 Topps , thinking they kind of broke the mold too with the somewhat fancy borders and thicker cardboard. I got a thing for Gold Cup cards so the Conine Is my favorite of this bunch.Great score!

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  5. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v520/mnbamboozled/griffeys/INSERTS/1994toppsspanish.jpg

    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v520/mnbamboozled/griffeys/INSERTS/1997toppsMit1998StarsandSteel029_zps3ab6d149.jpg

    ReplyDelete