I gotta think we have a few people in house that are autograph hounds or have a bunch of memorabilia that is autographed. Figured this would be a good place to ask...
why? I'm not asking in a judgmental looking down sort of way. People have their hobbies.
My brother gave me a mini helmet autographed by Jamaal Charles with a COA that sits on my desk which inspired the question. I derive greater value in the fact that my brother thought of me and spent his money to give it to me over the fact Jamaal Charles signed it and someone printed a "yup... he signed it" certificate. He knew Charles was my favorite player at the time and even he assigned additional value to the item because Charles had signed it.
I've never really understood the appeal of ones that are purchased. Like... I think about the time I got Okoye's autograph as a kid and it is a great memory but I was physically there. I then put the card in a plastic hard case and gave it to my buddy. Double great memory.
Jumping online and ordering one, to me, just doesn't have that same effect.
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What is it about autographs that you buy online or at a local shop that makes you want them and spend money on them?
Originally Posted by ChiefsFan88:
Did you sell it to pay off your mortgage?
Not yet, but the day is coming soon. I want to hand deliver it to Goldin auctions and I just haven’t gotten around to it yet. They keep telling me to send it overnight via FedEx but I’m not going trust a shipping service with something this expensive. [Reply]
Originally Posted by arrowheadnation:
Not yet, but the day is coming soon. I want to hand deliver it to Goldin auctions and I just haven’t gotten around to it yet. They keep telling me to send it overnight via FedEx but I’m not going trust a shipping service with something this expensive.
Yeah, I do not blame you one bit, I would hand deliver in person also [Reply]
I have a couple, but have never paid much for them. They're mostly just something that sits around and waits for someone to notice. I have a ball with the '85 signatures on it. I doubt it's even worth anything, but it has a smudge in one that gives it some character. At least you know the players actually held the ball. The sticker signatures being stuck on most of the cards today are just dumb.
I refuse to pay for the current PMII penis scribble. If I was to ever collect something of his it'd have to be one of his older original signatures. [Reply]
I have no idea, however, I do have some autographed Chiefs items i'd be motivated to part with if someone here is interested.
Football signed by the entire(?) 1991 team. Maybe 92? I dunno, but Mark Vlasic signed it.
Will Shields Jersey
A Chiefs hat signed by some rando players I got in 96 or 97 at River Falls (would have to research)
DM me if interested. Would prefer to keep it local/KC Area. [Reply]
I've never been a big autograph guy but one time I got Kotlen Wong to sign my hat outside of Wrigley Field. Then I felt like a prick because I completely mogged all the little kids trying to get autographs. [Reply]
So, interesting post. My answer to that is simple, THESE are OUR HEROES! I have these sigs from our beloved CHIEFS:
Jan Stenerud
Joe Montana
Patrick Mahomes
Derrick Thomas
Christian Okoye
Travis Kelce
Will Shields
Eric Berry
Tyreek Hill
Derrick Johnson
Len Dawson
Priest Holmes
Neil Smith
Eddie Kennison
It fills the man cave with history and life as a CHIEFS fan :-) [Reply]
When Patrick Mahomes II was drafted in 2017 I immediately bought his JSA signed mini helmet, I knew he was different. After we bought our home in 2016 I got a kick back check for $400. I was in conversation with a guy on ebay regarding a circa 96, 97 signed mini helmet by Derrick Thomas. In the background was a football life Derrick Thomas - the ebay guy accepted my offer and it is in the man cave to this day. My point is, when you get a chance at owning a piece of CHIEFSTORY, you get it! :-) As a long time Chiefs fan, it is incredible to have these pieces of history. I have an incredible Andy Reid SB 54 signed helmet as well as an actual SB54 ticket. To each his own but, own history when it presents itself :-)