rmontro wrote:I still have a fascination with card collecting. But overall, as hobbies go, I find it to be one of the more disappointing ones. There's nothing you can do with cards other than look at them. I guess that's my main problem with it. I still think they're kind of neat though. My favorite card that i have is a Star Trek card of Yeoman Colt from the pilot, signed by the actress who played her, Laurel Goodwin. I've always had a thing for redheads. She's also known for being in an Elvis movie, Girls Girls Girls.
So, speaking as a card collector, yeah, it's weird. Why do I feel a pull toward these little piece of cardboard that I largely store in the dark?
The clear starting point is that it was just what we sporty kids did when I was growing up.
I quite collecting a long time ago, only to get back into it during the pandemic, at which time I found it absolutely fascinating to understand how the hobby had evolved in the decades since I was a kid. It's definitely a nerd/geek rabbit hole for me.
Here's one thing I'll say though: If you have room to have full size art in your mansion, then I don't know why you'd bother with tiny little cards...but if you don't, a tiny little card is a space efficient way to collect your aesthetic.
One thing that's a part of card collecting that is certainly a bit arbitrary is the focus on rookie card. Not looking to defend this necessarily, but here's an image of my favorite WNBA-related card that I own:

So this is Maya Moore, who I consider to be the best women's basketball player who's ever played, on a card from when she was a McDonalds' All-American in high school, and it is an autograph. When Moore posed for and then signed this card, she was a high schooler who had no idea what her basketball career would entail. The young woman we see there is just someone in the process of seeing what she could become.
I just find that to be really cool.
I should note, I'm not really keen on "prospecting", as in buying cards of super-young players not in the pros yet as a bet on their future, but from a perspective history, knowing now what Moore became, this card speaks to a moment.