I watched the first part of this repair and was thinking there was no way you would fix that. Great job once again. I just got my delivery of the 4 oz bottle from you last week and I am going to try to this fix on some vintage cards with the same problem.
Getting ready to order your kit on Amazon right now 👍 I have a psa 8 with a lifted corner that I’m trying to restore. Thanks for the kit as well as tutorials
Nice save! I just bought a '90 Fleer Jordan which was switched from the one advertised. I received an OC card with a badly dinged edge. Card Spray got the ding completely out but did nothing for the 60/40 centering. 😂 Thanks Kurt. Your products work miracles.
Curious about the effects of a soaking on various card stock: true vintage(chipboard junky old 1980 and earlier) card stock has an eggshell texture, but that early 90s Jordan's card stock is much closer to a fine posterboard surface(so no eggshell texture)... It looked to me that the card here had developed an eggshell texture post-soak... might be worthwhile to have a second card onhand for the light test so we can all see any differences?..
@@kenrogers1948 hey Ken, I try to replicate the exact exact angle the best I can. If the texture didn’t look good, I would say that for sure. I wouldn’t want you to do it. Texture and surface look really good with this one. If you wanna see more soaking demonstrations, check out my vintage card playlist here on RUclips
@@billysikes1374 I know, I think they just made so many of them that it’s pretty easy to find them. They have more of a sentimental value to me than money.
@@SaiyajinBejitto I cut them into 6 x 6 squares. Sometimes you’ll see mine are a little wonky cut because they’re the miscuts that I don’t send my customers. I keep and use them.
@@SaiyajinBejitto it depends. This card took several days because I had to keep on putting a little bit of card spray on the mats and holding it. I shot this final installment five days after the day I started working on it.
@@channello-fi9548 you can watch the full demonstration if you wish. When something improves so much, this is a common thing to think. It’s easy and you could do it today.
Kurt, you are truly an artist. What you can do with a card is amazing.
@@pdumpel thanks man, I hope I can teach you how to do the same stuff
Awesome stuff as usual Kurt! Thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I watched the first part of this repair and was thinking there was no way you would fix that. Great job once again. I just got my delivery of the 4 oz bottle from you last week and I am going to try to this fix on some vintage cards with the same problem.
@@kenfett7070 thanks Ken, I’m excited to see what you work on. Send me some pictures sometime. I would love to see. ✌🏼
Getting ready to order your kit on Amazon right now 👍 I have a psa 8 with a lifted corner that I’m trying to restore. Thanks for the kit as well as tutorials
@@AJ-ui6ny absolutely, anytime. If you ever need me to look at a picture, hit me up on Instagram. ✌🏼
Nice save! I just bought a '90 Fleer Jordan which was switched from the one advertised. I received an OC card with a badly dinged edge. Card Spray got the ding completely out but did nothing for the 60/40 centering. 😂 Thanks Kurt. Your products work miracles.
@@alant.541 that damn centering! 😄 good job on the stuff that you could control
I've got my Ozzie Smith rookie between the pads right now...fingers crossed
@@briancolica6542 I’m confident you’re gonna make an improvement. I just hope it’s a great one.
Curious about the effects of a soaking on various card stock: true vintage(chipboard junky old 1980 and earlier) card stock has an eggshell texture, but that early 90s Jordan's card stock is much closer to a fine posterboard surface(so no eggshell texture)... It looked to me that the card here had developed an eggshell texture post-soak... might be worthwhile to have a second card onhand for the light test so we can all see any differences?..
@@kenrogers1948 hey Ken, I try to replicate the exact exact angle the best I can. If the texture didn’t look good, I would say that for sure. I wouldn’t want you to do it. Texture and surface look really good with this one.
If you wanna see more soaking demonstrations, check out my vintage card playlist here on RUclips
I have this card I pulled fresh from the pack and it's been in a penny sleeve and in my binder for 30 years
The miracle worker….lol
Nice restore🎉
@@Parapond thank you, I was happy to show this off. It was better than I would expect.
Another great one!
@@miguelavila8961 thank you ✌🏼
It's a shame the 1990 Fleer Hopps and Skybox MJ cards aren't worth much of anything
@@billysikes1374 I know, I think they just made so many of them that it’s pretty easy to find them. They have more of a sentimental value to me than money.
Where is your follow up video, thought I'd seen it posted before but can't find it now?
Found it, duh 😂
@@Corridor_Collectiables thanks for asking, I’m glad you found it
What dimensions do you cut the mat? will start a repair job on a 1st edition lugia soon, thanks!
@@SaiyajinBejitto I cut them into 6 x 6 squares. Sometimes you’ll see mine are a little wonky cut because they’re the miscuts that I don’t send my customers. I keep and use them.
@ hey kurt another question, how long do you keep the card between the glass?
@@SaiyajinBejitto it depends. This card took several days because I had to keep on putting a little bit of card spray on the mats and holding it. I shot this final installment five days after the day I started working on it.
This is bullshit. He just swapped out the damaged one for a non damaged one.
@@channello-fi9548 you can watch the full demonstration if you wish. When something improves so much, this is a common thing to think. It’s easy and you could do it today.
First KMz