December 01, 2013, 01:47 PM
Bill Mullinsautograph index
Is there a website or other resource that indexes autographs on cards? That is, I can enter a person's name and it will return all the cards they have signed?
December 01, 2013, 02:12 PM
webjonYou can search by signer on The Card Market -- there are over 500 sets checklisted on the site so all of those sets are included. The site is thecardmarket.com.
Jon
December 01, 2013, 07:14 PM
RavenNot really, I mean there is no comprehensive listing that doesn't check product to product.
Best thing I have found is search eBay under the signer's name and pull up all collectibles. If there is a certified card out there from any set, chances are someone is selling it. Even limited cards turn up eventually.
December 01, 2013, 07:22 PM
H_ToserYou can also search Jeff Allender's House of Checklists via Google by searching for:
"jim parsons" site:nslists.com
This is always helpful for searching for actors and actresses, as well as artists too.
December 02, 2013, 04:37 PM
allenderThe Encyclopedia of Non-Sport & Entertainment Trading Cards made a pretty good start by including an appendix of autographers. Of course, the current edition won't have any set after 2006.
Probably we'll never have a truly comprehensive list unless somebody takes it on as a "labor of love" for that specific sub-species. I do Raven's "search eBay by name" trick frequently, but you might also have to include oddball areas like sports memorabilia, because some card sellers post only there.
Ebay listings scroll out of the Completed Auctions list pretty quickly, though. If you want to search even farther back you can use worthpoint.com. (It won't work as a "price guide" unless you're a member, but you can see the descriptions and images of what's been sold online before, going back quite a few years.)
I admit that I often try Harris' trick first. It will usually get only the cards that were signed as part of a major set's distribution, and ignore the "uncertified" personally signed and show-signed cards (unless they were marketed as related to the card set).