28/12/2021 2021 in Collectibles: Reviewing the Top Trading Cards, NFT’s, Shoes & Storylines from the Year

2021 in Collectibles: Reviewing the Top Trading Cards, NFT’s, Shoes & Storylines from the Year article feature image

What a year 2021 has been in collectibles.

There have been so many ups and downs, shocking sticker prices for trading cards, big acquisitions and the introduction of the acronym “NFT” to our lexicon.

Let’s break down the year by the top highlights in the sector.

1. The Rise and Fall of the Michael Jordan Rookie

Much of the talk in the card world was how high the Michael Jordan PSA 10 rookie would go. With only 320 in the world, the thought was that after turnover in 2020, that well-heeled investors had most of them, meaning they’d hold and the price would rise.

The end of 2020 marked a record sale of $150,000 and two skyrocketed to $738,000 each in a Goldin Auction in January. But since then, it has been a steady decline. At the end of the year, Jordan mint rookies are hovering around the $300,000 range.

2. Fractional Share Brands Compete for Massive Pieces

Part of the rise of the high-end memorabilia industry comes from Rally, Otis and Collectable, companies that allow people to buy into high-end pieces they couldn’t afford on their own. The competition alone for these pieces in a variety of areas — including game used memorabilia, cards, historical documents and video games — boosts the market overall.

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3. The Rise and Fall of NBA Top Shot

Nothing was hotter than NBA highlight NFT digital collectibles from Dapper Labs in the beginning of the year. In February andMarch, $432 million worth of Top Shot NFT’s transacted.

The final nine months of the year combined? $350 million.

While Top Shot was the initial NFT with all the buzz, it got overtaken by Cryptopunks and Bored Apes.

4. Modern Basketball Cards Plummet

Despite absurd amounts graded of modern basketball cards, some of the highest-graded base cards were selling for thousands of dollars each last December. The poster child? The 2018-19 Luka Doncic base Panini prizm rookie, which was approaching $2,000 in a PSA 10 condition last December.

It’s currently under $500.

5. Game-Used Jordan Shoes Explode at Auctions

While “The Last Dance” led to a huge rise in Michael Jordan collectibles in 2020, this year brought us another record in sneakers, thanks to the appeal of everything MJ.

Sotheby’s sold a pair of game-used Air Ships, the predecessor to the Air Jordans, for $1.47 million this fall, a record for a pair of sneakers. Prior to 2020, the record sale for a pair of Jordans was the $104,000 paid for his “Flu Game” shoes in 2013.

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6. Honus Wagner is Still King

For 40 years, the T206 Honus Wagner cigarette card has been the star of the hobby and 2021 was no different. In May, Goldin Auctions sold one version for $3.75 million.

In August, Robert Edwards Auction broke the record themost expensive card ever sold, selling one for $6.6 million.

7. The Fanatics Takeover

In one of the most stealth moves that seemed impossible for these times, apparel giant Fanatics negotiated long-term card licensing deals with MLB, NBA and NFL and their players unions by giving them equity in a $10 billion new vehicle that had no active product. By making the move, it turned Topps and Panini into lame ducks.

For Topps, it came hours before Mudrick Capital was set to bring the company public. The deal got canceled and it’s assumed that Fanatics will one day buy Topps for a song.

8. Auto Patch Cards Go Insane

Game-used card pieces have been around for a long time, but 2021 will be known as the year that some of the top cards truly went nuts. In March, a rookie auto patch card of Luka Doncic sold for $4.6 million. In April, a LeBron James rookie patch auto sold for $5.2 million. Three months later, a Patrick Mahomes rookie patch auto sold for $4.3 million.

9. Cards and Memorabilia Become Recognized Asset Classes

With the bank giving people next to nothing in interest and with rising inflation, 2021 will be the year where cards and memorabilia got recognized as a legitimate place to put your money. To further legitimize the space came the rise of tools and data tracking seen in more mature asset classes by brands such as Card Ladder, Alt and eBay.

10. PSA Shutdown and Acquisitions

As millions and millions of cards came into PSA to get graded, the company — bought for $700 million in December 2020 by entrepreneur Nat Turner, Mets owner Steve Cohen, The Chernin Group and others — just couldn’t keep up.

First came the price increases, then came a total shutdown. The hobby accepted it as a necessary evil and it ended the submitting of every single card to get graded (read: The Junk Slab Era) as prices and speed of delivery returned at higher levels. PSAaddedvideo game grader WATA, Card Latter for expanded data and Genamint to help use artificial intelligence for grading.

11. New collectible spaces explode

Led by sealed and graded video games going for hundreds of thousands of dollars — Rallysold its Super Mario Bros. for $2 million— collectors went into new spaces. Video games, helped by auction house companies including Heritage and Goldin, got the most buzz. But graded comics, sealed old toys, graded tickets and sealed and graded VHS tapes all were added to the conversation.

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Arts

https://www.actionnetwork.com/news/2021-collectibles-reviewing-top-trading-cards-nfts-shoes-storylines-from-the-year

Interesting NFTs
Noodle Rock
soft body spline & hair simulations in cinema 4d
Goat
Hey, who's in charge here? This collaboration between Beeple and Peter France was created using Cinema 4D, Bellus3D for the heads, Octane Render, and Adobe Photoshop.
Smile to Shreds, Neon Gwen
The First KayPikeFashion Mint Ever. Ever feel so joyful and were grinning so hard you felt you could split in half? That punk rebel yell of glee when you pull of a particularly refined stunt? This is the paint of dreams, fangs and neon. Hellish and hard to pull off. I was able to with this work quietly paint a sweet inner tale of childhood influences, rat fink and autobody shops. All while pretending to paint gwenom for the audience. More on that in bonus material. This is my alternate animation made specifically for crypto art collectors. It will only ever exist in this format. You get the Shiny, unused in media verified image. More on that in the bonus material. Mixed Media: Bio/Digital. Glycerin on 5'9" human skin 10-14 hours Performance art. Shot on Canon EOS RP. 16 + hours Photoshop and DaVinci Resolve. All Works are SFW. Art has been Seen on the front page of Reddit, Featured in the New York Times, Galileo.tv, and multiple other promotions including Twitch.tv, Disney Interactive, RIOT games, WB games, AMD and more! More on how this art is unique and potentially explosive in the NFT world: https://youtu.be/CXbNF2Y6srs ------------------------- The purchase of this NFT Grants the buyer unique bonus material. Physical Mail Bonus Package: A verified physical Art Print. Autographed from the artist in 12x16. Please allow a few weeks for delivery. Digital Bonus Package: This image in .mp4. An "About the Art" Video and an "From the Artist" introduction. A README.txt about the artwork with some personal notes and Links relevant to the artwork.
Beloved water
Always waters surrounding me. Beloved water, beloved moon, beloved body, beloved soul, beloved spirit. Every day of this life is blessed.
Cypher::Prophet
Cypher::Prophet is an artwork dedicated to the punk origins of blockchain designed and realized by hackatao and hex6c. In the transposition into images we started from the iconographic canons of the hacker (hoodie, laptop, cryptographic elements) and associated them with the figure of the prophet, thus highlighting the predictive nature of the works of Eric Hughes (Cypherpunk Manifesto, 1988) and Timothy C. May (Crypto Anarchist Manifesto, 1993) as well as of the blockchain inventors Stuart Haber and Scott Stornetta (How to Time-Stamp a Digital Document, The Journal of Cryptography, 1991). Read the full story on https://medium.com/@hex6c/cypher-prophet-the-punk-origins-of-blockchain-1e8fce311e72