September 26, 2025, 04:31 AM
catskilleagleNon-Sport Error Cards?
I've always thought that errors were unintentional (their getting made and their getting into the packs) all the time until maybe the late 90's when a company or two realized that it was better for them to keep collectors buying packs/boxes after they'd completed their sets. With all the superproduction of the early-mid 90's, errors were bound to occur and get into packs but maybe a few manufacturers decided to see if anyone would later notice a little too much foil or a color a few shades lighter/darker or maybe they just let the sheets go and get cut to meet the deadline.
September 26, 2025, 09:35 AM
wolverine651I’d be curious, do we know which companies in the late 90s intentionally made misprints, and is there evidence of that? I certainly won’t say it’s impossible. Usually when a company does this sort of thing, it’s like the Topps example from baseball I mentioned- they made an “NNOF” variant of the Draft Picks in 2015 Archives, but it’s very clear here it is a planned parallel and intentional ‘error’ (not really an error at all). Sorry to post a sports card, but to show an example:
As for 90s Fleer/Skybox marvel like the above, it’s a bit of an Occam’s razor thing for me…the simplest explanation is probably just factory mistakes that got through. I imagine QC with the huge print runs was taking random samplings and the affected error sheets could have just not been in an analyzed sample.
Without something like testimony from an ex-Fleer/printing factory employee saying they intentionally made errors, there would be no way to know for sure…but some of the reasons pointing to probably accidents would be 1)the types of errors (which tend to arise from innocent mistakes), 2)the large print runs meaning some errors probably happened, 3)I imagine a factory worker (these sets were usually contracted out to print) just wants to get the job done correctly, very possibly not interested in the cards themselves or making a rare collectible or whatever- simply in the business of printing cards. Sure it’s possible Fleer/Skybox dictated a few sheets in the run be messed up, but goes back to Occams Razor, what’s more likely and the simpler explanation.
There is something in history scholarship called the Criterion of Embarrassment (loosely- that in say an ancient text, something written that is embarrassing/negative for the author increases its chances to be true since why would they deliberately write something false that reflects badly on them). While not the same here, it’s almost an analogous situation- you’d think Fleer/Skybox (or the factory) wouldn’t want ugly misprints to get out since it reflects badly on them- embarrassing to them, so why intentionally do it. Also of note: back in the 90s when these came out, it’s possible people didn’t realize such errors would have collectible value as many are starting to realize more over the last couple decades. At the time, if people didn’t outright toss them from annoyance of getting a “messed up card” (they want a regular looking one for their set!)..or they may have held them as a curiosity and not much more. So a company at the time wouldn’t even necessarily think a misprint would end up as some big collectible thing.
Long story short, I guess we dont know for sure. But I’d lean toward the above are more than likely just accidents. An argument could be made it doesn’t make a big difference at all whether Fleer purposely did a sheet of inverted wrong foil names for 93 Masterpieces base cards, or it happened by accident. In either case, it’s an inverted wrong foil name 93MM card, which is inherently interesting, and a needle in haystack. I’m not quite sure where I stand on that- I do think it would lose the charm of being an accident, but still something that stands out and can be added to a master set. (I would contrast a solo factory worker purposely having a wrong sheet get through to a pre-planned, announced “error” set such as Topps did in 2015 Archives at least). Anyway.. interesting question to ponder!
September 27, 2025, 01:46 AM
catskilleagleHere's another foil stamp error, promo card 4 of 5 from another set (The Bob Marley Legend) and company (Island Vibes) from 1995. The one on the left has the gold foil stamp and the one on the right has just an orange logo that appears to have been the target for the stamp but it didn't get the stamp. I haven't seen one of these in person.
September 27, 2025, 02:18 AM
wolverine651Nice one! Yea looks like a bona fide no-foil error.
September 27, 2025, 04:16 AM
catskilleagleI don't have a card but found a note I made about some Skybox Lion King cards have NBA basketball backs.
September 27, 2025, 09:32 PM
wolverine651quote:
Originally posted by catskilleagle:
I don't have a card but found a note I made about some Skybox Lion King cards have NBA basketball backs.
This sounds very similar to the 94 Marvel Masterpieces / 94 Hoops example. I looked up the skybox Lion King set and it’s also 1994. Was the basketball set NBA Hoops?
Sounds like Fleer/Skybox was mixing around a few uncut sheets of different sets when printing the fronts vs backs that year.
September 27, 2025, 09:45 PM
catskilleagleAll I read was that they were NBA basketball - no actual set title provided. Maybe someone reading this with a card or two will add a comment.