
3-D cards were like out of this world to a kid, a card that had motion or movement, Wow! In 1968 Topps did test market it in NY, but it was too expensive to keep interest; Kellogg's Cereal would give it a try in the 70s & 80's among others.
grade given their susceptibility to surface cracks due to aging.
Trademarked by Optigraphics 3/22/76. Sportflics was TM @ 12/15/85. Owned by Ann Blake ... president A.G. Atwater, the company responsible for distribution, said Sportflics are official baseball cards but they offered a much greater dimension than the average baseball card.
Sportflics were 3-D [[Lenticular Printing| lenticular ]] cards that were initially pop, turn the card at an angle - you can see any one of the 3 players sometimes illustrated in motion.
At 1st set looks out of order. You see the player's uniform # on the baseball. Look to left corner they they are numbered, a 2nd series never did appear.
82 HALL of FAMERS - 1 RC - Higuera - 200 cards
Product Information
| Category | Toys & Collectibles > Trading Cards > Trading Card Boxes |
|---|---|
| Brand | MLB |
| Condition | Like new |
