Collector Nation - Card Care, Grading, and the Line Between Preservation and Alteration | Kurts Card Care

Episode Date: February 3, 2026

As the hobby grows more sophisticated, conversations around card care have become louder — and more misunderstood. In this episode of Collector Nation, Ryan Alford welcomes Kurt Colon of Kurt’s C...ard Care for a grounded discussion on what card care actually is, why it exists, and how collectors should think about preservation versus alteration. Kurt shares his personal journey as a lifelong collector, detailing how his background in craftsmanship and restoration led to building products — and education — for collectors worldwide. The conversation moves beyond surface-level debates and into deeper territory: why condition sensitivity increased, why modern materials behave differently, and why education matters more than chasing grades. Kurt also explains why he views cards as personal treasures first, investments second — a perspective shaped by decades of collecting and hands-on experimentation. Key Takeaways: Card care is about preservation, not manipulation Modern cards degrade differently than vintage paper Knowing what can’t be fixed matters as much as what can Education protects collectors more than any product The hobby’s future depends on informed stewardship This episode offers clarity, context, and a calmer perspective on a topic that often sparks unnecessary controversy. Want to go deeper into smarter collecting and preservation? 🧼 Kurt’s Card Care — Learn more about card care, preservation, and education: 👉 https://kurtscardcare.com 🃏 Collector Nation — Watch full episodes and exclusive conversations: 👉 https://thecollectornation.com 🏪 Collector Station (Ryan Alford’s card shop – Easley, SC): 👉 https://thecollectorstation.com 📊 Ludex — Scan, track, and manage your collection: 👉 https://www.ludex.com 📸 Follow Ryan Alford: Instagram → https://www.instagram.com/ryanalford

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Stuff that's like 100 years old could be just filthy dirty. And you can clean these cards so much. Like this is where I'll get the most like, oh, like thing right? Like where I'll soak a card and get all the wrinkles and dirt to come out of it. And then teach me how to dry them. And at first it blows people away, which goes back to one of your earlier questions. This stuff freaks people out because they never seen somebody soak in 1952 Mickey Mantle until they met me. I kind of got a little bit of a twitch you say in the word soak.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Oh, dude. Welcome to the Collector Nation podcast here on the Collector Nation Network. Whether you're chasing grails or calling bluffs, you take you inside the hobby. Here's your host, Ryan Alford. What's up guys? Welcome to Collector Nation here on the Collector Nation Network. You know, there's no doubt that everyone knows at this point my affinity for the hobby and getting back into it. and part of what I was talking about with my guest today before the episode got started was, hey, I get to like look at like a product or a card or something one day.
Starting point is 00:01:14 And then the next day I'm talking to them. This is one of my favorite products in the hobby. I'm just going to say that. And that's unpaid, unscripted. It just is the truth. And it is. Kurt's card care. And it is.
Starting point is 00:01:26 It smells really good. It's Kurt Cologne. Ryan, what's up, man? Thanks for the amazing introduction, and thanks for taking the time to have me on, dude. Hey, dude, big fan of what you're doing. Look, man, these are treasures. You use this word yourself. Treasure, we're treasure hunter.
Starting point is 00:01:46 These are treasures. We've got to take care of this stuff, man. Like, why don't you want it to look better? I mean, this ain't about like, I love it. I can, you know, I'll raise my hand. I'll raise both my hands for that one. Yeah, I started looking around when I got back into the hobby. I started looking around for a few different things because it'd been, I really put it on the shelf.
Starting point is 00:02:06 Like, okay, got into a basketball player year round in high school and middle school and put the cards up. And they didn't come back out to my kids got into it. So I was like 25 years on the shelf. And when I came back into it, I was looking for a few things. I was like, number one, okay, there's got to be apps now. It's got to be apps, right? We've got to have technology to manage our collections, all that. That's right.
Starting point is 00:02:28 Okay. All right. We got new looking cards. We got that. all right, all right. It's got to be a better way to keep up with them, to clean them or to, like, there's got to be something. And it was like, it took me a year to find you. Because I didn't really have time. I was doing it passively. And then finally, like, I tripped over it. And I was like, oh, yeah, this is what makes sense. We've got to take care of these cars. Like, sometimes you
Starting point is 00:02:52 got just small. It's not even a blemish. It's just like a smudge, like your grimy fingerprints. How can we do this and not hurt the card? and here you are. I hear you, man. See, I'm the, I feel like I have that same thought ever since I was a kid. You know, I'm like, they are our little pieces of treasure, right? So, like, sometimes that was as much as little treasure as I got. I just knew that I always had to take good care of them.
Starting point is 00:03:16 And I always looked for, Ryan, to be a customer of a company like mine. Because I figured it exists. Yeah. I figured there's got to be a way to get common things off of our little collectibles, our little treasures. and I just never found anything that was like satisfactory. And then like being like a person that's always, I come from a family that embraced art,
Starting point is 00:03:37 that embraced a lot of hands-on stuff and being creative and stuff like that. And if we didn't have a tool for something, we'd figure it out, you know, and that's really, you know, just I couldn't find a Kurt's card care that had all the issues that I wanted to work on. So, man, I just started piecing it together years and years ago. And, you know, I just took a chance, probably about five and a half years ago,
Starting point is 00:04:00 and I'm like, I'll make an Instagram page, see what people have to say about it. And the market really spoke for itself, and it turns out that everybody was waiting for something that was, you know, practical and easy and reliable to like kind of add a whole new layer of, you know, like collecting.
Starting point is 00:04:14 Talk to me, and I want to talk some specifics around the process, procedures, what to do, how you, I think there's some fast. I think for people that you either know your products, but probably have it, heard you talk about them explicitly or people that are just hearing this first time like when I didn't go and oh my God, oh really? And hitting the order button. But what was it like? Like is it the last, does Kurt, did Kurt have a laboratory at his house?
Starting point is 00:04:44 Like what was the process for developing this product? Yeah, dude. That's pretty much right. That's exactly. That's exactly it. So like I'll give you the, you can unpack it further if you want. But I'll try to trim it down because I forgot. People even watch this and be like, what does this guy do? Like, what is he talking about? So like, even in trying to like meet other adults through like kids sports, I'll ask me what I do when I'm like, well, I make some great products to teach people how to take care of their Pokemon cards and baseball cards.
Starting point is 00:05:13 It's kind of hard to even explain, right? But where it all started really, Ryan, was just me being a particular person and a collector my whole life. And I've always, I give a lot of credit to my mother. My mom's an amazing artist, but my dad was a crazy mechanic, and he was very good with science, and my mom was super artistic. So, like, just in the household I grew up in, it was like you fix up with art or science. And really, sure enough, dude, the things I've loved since I was a little kid, like playing guitars, listening to music, collecting cards are really things that I just really kind of stayed with professionally through my whole life. But, like, when it came to,
Starting point is 00:05:53 the card care stuff, I started, my family owned a dealership. Okay. So like when you work in a body shop growing up, oh, this is going. Yes. I'm around really creative, awesome people. My father was a fabricator, great painter, like people that could do amazing stuff. Like Detroit mechanics is where I'm from. Okay. So like guys that were real good at their hands. And then like, so when it came to working in the body shop, and we did car not card shows but car shows like every weekend we'd compete and also we would race so like i had a really fun kind of weekends growing up so one of my my jobs was to detail everything keep everything super tight and super clean so that didn't really the apple didn't fall far from the tree and so then you know being i always like how stuff is made i'm always just a big i could
Starting point is 00:06:47 watch like how it's made the tv show like on binge watch for the rest of my life and so i'm probably and still want to watch more of them. Like I'm really, I love how stuff ticks. And like the essence of how stuff's all put together, like, I was watching people, there were some people that cleaned cards or tried to improve them. I wasn't like the only person ever thought of this, but it was usually with like other Windex. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:09 Yeah. The wrong blend. Ajax? Yeah. You know if there's salsa that's like mild and then there's salsa that will like put you in the hospital? That's kind of like the same thing like metaphorically speaking is like chemicals. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:07:22 mean. So like, there is some really easy, responsible, great ways to take care of paper and plastic, but it's usually not achieved through stuff that's under your sink or on the shelf in your garage. So that's where I really stepped up and was like, I'm going to make stuff because it doesn't exist. And I'm a stubborn mule, Ryan. Like, I will do something over, I will fail 1,000 times in a row just to get it right, dude. I'm just, and that can be a strength and an annoyance for those around me. But when it comes to, you know, do the building and testing and everything. Yes, that's how I started.
Starting point is 00:07:57 And fortunately now, now I don't have to, like, have a kitchen laboratory anymore. Right out back, we have a beautiful state-of-the-art laboratory and facility where now I have my own professional lab, and this is where we develop and manufacture all of our products. Where's home? We are in Detroit, Michigan. Detroit, Michigan. Hey, the automotive hub, right there. Good fear.
Starting point is 00:08:21 That's all my family, man, was all immigrant officers. workers. It's so funny. When you brought up the car thing, look, I owned, I've done the entrepreneur thing for 10 plus years. I think I keep saying 10 years and I feel like it was two years ago when I said, I think it's my ticker is not adding up enough. When you're an entrepreneur, you enter the time warp and all of a sudden you're like
Starting point is 00:08:43 30 years old. I think it's 12 years now because I love the corporate world. I did kind of venture back in it for like half a second and then got back out again. But nonetheless. So it's, I could see like Kurt playing in the lab like, you know, 10 years ago, seven years ago, whenever you started. Like that I'm seeing you in a white coat with beakers or something. Like, it's smoke. Like I don't know why my brain goes to the TV, you know, version.
Starting point is 00:09:12 I know it doesn't all work that way. Yeah, dude, I was always the kid that wanted like, you know, an art set for Christmas and a science lab. You know, I mean, like I was, I always love putting stuff together. I think, let me ask you this. Would, and you do, I'll say this. You know, once I finally got the product and was using it about four months ago, I went down the rabbit hole and watched all the videos. Maybe not everyone, but like all the ones that mattered for what I was trying to do.
Starting point is 00:09:40 Do you think the average person would be surprised or disappointed with how, you know, far gone a card could kind of be versus what a little bit of just restoration and cleanup can bring back. It seemed to me like it was pretty magic. Thanks, man. I think that it's pretty, and you're a great person to speak on that, Ryan, because you guys didn't even know each other until today until you did. I mean, like, yeah, this is unscripted and it's un-performed. I'm just a fan. Right. Thank you, man. Because it's like, you know, it's like my sister-in-law owns a great bakery. And naturally, when she brings me cookies, they're freaking amazing because she made them. You know, but you don't even know about my cookies. You just got it used them, you know. So,
Starting point is 00:10:22 I think that most collectors would be surprised because one of my initial nudges to get into this, Ryan, and chase it down was I was, I'm 44 now. I was 20, probably 24. I put all my 1986 fleer stickers and basketball cards together. I feel like I'm an artistic person, man. I feel like I got a good eye. I know what a cornered dent. I knew in my mind, dude, I sent all these cards in to get graded at Beckett. I got like fives and sixes on all these.
Starting point is 00:10:54 I was like crushed. I felt like, we're talking about card grading. Like, come on, get real. But I was so disappointed in myself. I was like, dude, what is this? I'm mad at the MRI. I'm mad at myself. What is going on here?
Starting point is 00:11:07 That's when I started really going to card shows on the weekend and going up and talking to guys that had nines and tens. I'm like, do you do anything to this? How do you do this? What is this? You know, and I started collecting data. Yeah. So then anyways, since I was so surprised about how low,
Starting point is 00:11:22 a card can like score or how condition sensitive they were, I had a lot to learn. So then when back to your question, somebody gets some card care stuff and they have cards that are 20 years old, even if they're kept in their binders, you got 20 years worth of spring, fall, summer, winter, you know, all kinds of different atmospheres and stuff going on. You'd be guys would be surprised. Like, I bet Ryan, when you did, like, did you do sports cards or Pokemon cards? Like, what were the ones that you did for? Sports cards.
Starting point is 00:11:47 I had, unfortunately, prime junk wax era. 87 to 92 But good stuff that has patina on it to clean up Right? Yes So regardless of the player I bet you even found it was fun to play with these things after a while Because it was like, ooh, I can get this wax stain off Or I can get this corner straight or whatever you know
Starting point is 00:12:07 I did that with a lot of 87 tops like you know Base card like crappy they're all base cards I guess Like that's the problem with someone who they had no rarity Because they're all printed you know 800 million times the same card But yeah I would play around with with that, like, I don't know, what that powdery, I don't know what that substance is, like you said, that just gets on there and it comes off, though. It is.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I think that Ryan, it was a lot of the plastic stuff that they were kept in. Yeah. Plastic will degrade as the years go by, and you'll get, like, kind of like a surface degradation on those types of things. So it's, hey, I am, I might be easily amused, but I just always, I always love my card collection, and I always thought it was fun to just, like, make them look good again. You know what I mean? It's like, who doesn't, who doesn't clean up something like your space, your office,
Starting point is 00:12:51 whatever, and it looks great and you feel good. I tell you, as silly as it sounds, cleaning up your old collection is like a super cool feeling, and it's a good skill to have if you're an active collector. You can buy it. So, just so we put this to the bed, like, what is the debate, though?
Starting point is 00:13:07 Like, I get that if you're getting, like, the paint out, or getting, like, you're truly changing the card. There's boundaries, right? Like, yeah, there's boundaries here. Like, I'm getting my, I've got a professional like waxing like putting a whole new coat of something on it or it i don't know that that would
Starting point is 00:13:28 be good bad or different making things up because i don't know how to do these things um but pain or something i'm retouching it but what is the heartburn over just purely cleaning up the cards and like restoring them without altering them why is there a heartburn about that i think ryan because, like, a lot of times people don't like something until it's popular, you know? And I think that, um, at first, and then sometimes you can think that like a few squeaky wheels speak for everybody, you know, the, sometimes we can grab a few bits of data and we think we painted a whole picture out of the trillions of bits of data out there, you know? Because even like you is a person that's in touch with media and plugged in, you didn't find
Starting point is 00:14:15 about me until a few months ago, you know what I mean? Yeah. And the last thing I thought was, wow, this is potentially a bad product doing bad thing. No, the first thing I thought was this makes a ton of sense and is amazing. Right. Thanks for that. And that's yours, but somebody could totally, it's always rooted. I know.
Starting point is 00:14:31 It's like, again, I get the retouching thing. And that's what I'll say, right? Because like, here's what I would say. To anybody, I'm assuming anybody watching this, I'm just going to assume that they've never seen anything like this before or they might not know enough. So like, the thing is, me personally, I never got into this for a business. It turned into one, but I got into this because I loved cards my whole life.
Starting point is 00:14:53 I grew up in a very blue-collar family in Detroit. Cards were kind of like my treasure. They seemed way more important to me than anything else. You know what I mean? So I started with a love of these things. And then 20 years ago, when I'm cleaning off the surface of cards and working out, figuring out ways to get wrinkles and dents out of them, never once did I think about, like, oh, this is, I'm going to like, you know, teach this to the whole world or whatever.
Starting point is 00:15:17 like that. I just enjoyed it. So I got good at it. And then I sent in these cards to get graded. And I'd realize, hey, if you know how to clean off stuff off the front or clean off stuff off the back or figure out, you know, shape them up, you can get a higher score. And personally, as a competitive person, I like that. You know what I mean? Sure, the money is, money is part of the picture. But I, me personally, if anybody wants to know, I don't even sell anything. I'm a, I'm a packer at collector. I am a collector. So the narrative of somebody's trying to say, like, I just do this for a bunch of money. Nope, that don't work because I don't even sell my cards. They're all, they're all, I'm a hoarder. I am curious though what Kurt's hit rate is now. Like now doing what you do.
Starting point is 00:15:57 Like if you, and I don't know that you do it, it's supposed to if you're packing them, but if you, if I gave you 10 cards, you know, that were in, you know, feasibility, but had issues, but feasibility, like what your hit rate is, like on getting like tens. You can, yeah, like a 10 would be. Because you probably know whether to even send it or not. Like, I support it's that, right? And it's a good question, right? And like kind of like what I was saying, like, is to improve them, I think every card has a potential for improving.
Starting point is 00:16:27 One of the best things I can teach anybody that's into card care is how is the right stuff to look for and the right stuff to buy. That's where it starts. Yeah. Because you can't buy a bunch of cards at our PSA nines and say put this on the front and it's going to come back at 10. What if that's not even the problem? You know what I mean? Yeah. It's off-centered.
Starting point is 00:16:44 As a card care person, you've got to pretty much develop your eye of what's doable and what's not. So, like, I do, I create hundreds of videos, hundreds of teaching demonstrations. I go live every week trying to really educate collectors like what's doable and what's not. Because, like, what we're saying in the past question is, you know, I've knew. I always knew. As a person that treasures and loves these things, I never would want to cut a card or trim a card. I'd feel like it would hurt my heart. Like, I don't want to trim it up.
Starting point is 00:17:08 I don't want to add any stupid colors to it. I want to teach people how to remove those colors that people did before. you know um but yeah i just always knew that that wouldn't be legit but i always thought to myself so coming from the automotive world the huge thing that makes an automobile worth more money when you sell it is numbers matching which means everything is stock everything is stock showroom stock so like original paint yeah original original color code everything so the thing is if you um when i look at cards i always figured that's like a it's a total modification if you trimmed a card,
Starting point is 00:17:44 color to card. It's out of bounds, and I'm not into it. So I always thought, do what you can do with the original materials and improve it to its best self. Getting a 10,
Starting point is 00:17:53 since I always went for like the broken, the beaten, and the blue, or the bruised, I never got tens. I just always got beat up ass cards that I thought were cool
Starting point is 00:18:02 that felt like treasure to me and that made me feel good just making them look better. You know what I mean? The value was almost in the time spent, honestly, Ryan. So like, it was just like something
Starting point is 00:18:11 is a person that is a creator, and as an artist, like, I like making stuff look cool. So, you know, lining up 10 cards that are like nines and trying to get them out of tens, I've never even tried that because I don't even care about that. Hey, you know. There you go. That alone should solve any debate that's out there, and I didn't personally see it. But if somebody else wants to do that, line up nine cards and do them.
Starting point is 00:18:33 Do it. Yeah, no, I want to. I want to my store or at least know what I'm buying. I don't, like, not, you know, you got to at least know. And it's hard for me to us to unpack and teach. everybody here on this today, but like, probably the best thing is learning what's doable versus not, you know? Yeah, that's, I'd love for you to talk about that, Kurt, you know, and I'm talking with Kurt Cologne. He is the founder of Kurt's card care, and this is a business specializes in cleaning, polish, and restoring products for trading cards and collectors.
Starting point is 00:19:05 So, Kurt, talk to me about, okay, what's, fix is the wrong word, but I'm going to use it. I don't like that word. You can break it down. We can do modern cards, vintage cards, or Pokemon cards. Let's talk about modern. Let's start at modern cards. What is improvable? Fix is the wrong word.
Starting point is 00:19:27 Improvable. So most modern cards, and I'll preface that saying, even though 90s were a while ago, modern cards pretty much started than 90s. If you guys collect, you know, like Topps Chrome and Pinini Prism, we'll just stay right there. There you go. of them. Those cards, as years go by, the plastic, like Ryan can tell you, on the front of them, they get cloudy, they get dingy, even if you kept them in a nice place. It just happens, you
Starting point is 00:19:51 guys. So, like, you can, that's one of the most satisfying things. If you guys ever watch my before and afters and you see one that's just like, looks like it's just cloudy, and then you see one right there, Ryan will even tell you, it only takes 10 seconds. It's not even, it's not a process. It's just seriously wiping it down. But then you'd say, like, well, you know, why can't just use a towel. It just doesn't work that way. You've got to be able to cut through that crap. So like cleaning up older cards. Stuff that's new, Ryan, I make a, um, this right here. It's called recovery. It's a, it's a little light scratch remover. And it's great because a lot of the, a lot of the chrome cards and prism cards have a thick plastic cover, but they, they're
Starting point is 00:20:31 scratch magnets, man. You know, they get real scratched up. So like if you get good with recovery, you can do a little light surface buff and eliminate little surface scratches. And then really, finally, like, the things that you can do on the back of these modern cards is if you ever see dents and stuff on the back, I can even show people how to get dents out. So those would be, like, the top three things you could do with, like, a modern era card. Can you get a crimp out from the print machine? Oh, dude, we can try. You know, I should bring you up for that. Like, just come to a degree and we'll fly in.
Starting point is 00:21:00 And, like, literally, that'd be like a fun thing. I have a J.J. McCarthy, which literally autograph that one of the first of us. my boys pulled is one of those when we got back into it we ripped more than i i've already said this number a million times now but let's just say 50k plus over like a year you guys hey it was time with the kids yes right yeah it was uh but you know one of the first cards that we got that we were excited about was a j j j mccarthy rookie this was last year right when the you know all the hype for those guys was high oh yeah and beautiful card and it had a and i'd never seen this We'd already ripped a fair amount.
Starting point is 00:21:41 A factory crimp all like across the bottom. Like I had never seen before. It's like almost like we were tuck in the pack, right, right? Yeah. And some people try to play me for the, well, it's one-on-one. I was like, yeah, it is. And then people said, well, you could send it back. Pettini would probably replace it.
Starting point is 00:22:00 But there was something nostalgic about it. But then I was like, when you were just talking, I was like, that may be a bigger dent than you're talking about, though. But it might be possible because you would be, blown away. And the thing is, everything that I teach, Ryan, like, I'll tell people something about me. Like, I made this stuff for me first. So I had to learn how to love using this stuff before I expect anybody else to use it. And I'll tell you guys what, even though I've said in this interview that I'm stubborn, I'll do the same thing over and over. When it comes to
Starting point is 00:22:23 working on a card, I don't have infinite patience. I want to get something done. I need to see some results or I'm getting a little, like, itchy. So, like, most things that I can teach how to do are pretty easy. So, like, Ryan, when it comes to like the crimps on the bottoms, offline you shoot me a picture and I could probably give you a little recipe for it because there might be a possibility and then or it might not much or it might not never know so so we can get the dense off the modern talking modern card that took us off a little tangent there with my own personal hey look if I'm gonna have on get people I get to get my own personal like stuff here I'm here for you right you know I get at least lean into Kurt's knowledge the uh but so the modern cards we can get maybe some dents out that might be on the back we can get surface level small micro scratches potentially. Yep. What else with those modern cards?
Starting point is 00:23:17 Is that about it? You know, the good thing about modern cards is, Ryan, they're rigid and they're strong. So you don't have a, but the blemishes are a lot of times permanent. Because on the front,
Starting point is 00:23:27 on the opposite, I like to educate people like what you're going to deal with if it's permanent, those dimples on the front of those. Don't talk to me about dimples. Throw it out. You know, those,
Starting point is 00:23:37 it's just, I imagine when they make those cards, there's a heat press involved. There's, you know, there's a manufacturing process. And it's just there's going to be little dimples on a thin, small piece of plastic sometimes, you know. So those are unmovable. The word printline, that's a collector word that we'll use a lot. Yeah. Either printlines will be either dug into the card so deep.
Starting point is 00:23:56 It's like a river and it ain't going nowhere. Sometimes there are a streak of grease and you can wipe them off and you're like magic. And other times it's a little like scuff and you can use like recovery to buff it out a little bit. Those are going to vary, you know. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they proceed with expectations in check. Yeah, and the other thing is that most people that love, here's something I can share with you, it has turned into like such a crazy community that doing this. I would have never guessed, right? I knew people would like cleaning cards, but you don't know when you come out and make a page and just put yourself out there and say, all right, you know, what do you guys think?
Starting point is 00:24:34 You know, good, better and different. and I'll hear it because how about you ever going to feel it out, you know? Yeah. Yeah, dude. It's such a topic for discussion, too. Like, like, what did you do here? What did you? I can just see your forums or whatever you're in.
Starting point is 00:24:51 Like, you've got to be tens of thousands of messages. That's what it is. That's really what I'm really doing right now. I really focus hard to, like, give people great service, like, exceptional service. Because I know that if people start with card care and they can get over the, the first bump of like learning a few things, they'll love it and they'll do it forever. I also know if people like get into it and like work on their best card with like a couple bits of information and screw something up there out forever.
Starting point is 00:25:17 So I just felt like if I'm going to do this right, I got to give like my initial first few years of customers and always, but I mean like really hands on care because collectors like we we roll together. So once you train 10,000 collectors how to collect or 50,000 collectors how to take care of their cards, they're going to take care of their homies, and everything will be cool, you know, but I really just knew that if I didn't support this product and, like, treat it like, treat everybody like they're my brother and like welcome to the studio here every day, I just knew it wouldn't work. So as much as I got to work on these products, you know, it's like I got to teach
Starting point is 00:25:52 people how to how to use them well and, you know, be cool answering the same question 350 times a day, you know. I'm about to say, that's, it probably takes patience because you create the videos to, and I'll probably, let me go ahead. Kurt, forgive me now. I will, in our relationship and friendship, that is just getting started, but will be best buddies at some point because I'm going to force you. But I will probably ask you something that there's a video on, but just be patient with me. That's allowed. You know, Ryan, you know, right? It's a blessing to be busy with something you created.
Starting point is 00:26:28 That's true. Yeah, that's what you had to remember. All right. Off track, I have so many things I like talking with Kurt about here. Vintage, what can be expected? What are the types of things that Kurt's card care helps with? My favorite. We can talk about paper vintage cards all day, but we'll keep it short.
Starting point is 00:26:46 You guys, even if you don't collect vintage paper cards right now, it's a good time to get involved because know your history, man. You know, you can learn so much from vintage athletes, vintage stories. You know, I'm a huge heart. My heart is history. I love history, you know, from my family tree to, you know, all the baseball cards. So like with baseball cards, pay, let's say cards, vintage cards are from when they started until 1988.
Starting point is 00:27:13 That would be vintage paper. And these are amazing, you guys, because they've been through so many eras. So like stuff that's like 100 years old could be just filthy dirty. And you can clean these cards so much. Like this is where I'll get the most like, oh, like thing right? Like where I'll soak a card and get all the wrinkles and dirt to come out of it. and then teach people how to dry them. And at first it blows people away,
Starting point is 00:27:37 which goes back to one of your earlier questions is like, where did people, this stuff freaks people out because they never seen somebody soak in 1952 Mickey Mantle until they met me. I kind of got a little bit of a Twitch you'd say in the word soak. Oh, dude. You got to watch that video yet.
Starting point is 00:27:53 Wait, if you look at them, you guys, even this is where I'll have watchers, Ryan, they don't even collect because of my vintage stuff. I'll have people that say, hey, when are you going to do one like this coming up? I'll make you working on one. They're like, oh, we don't even collect cards. We just like to watch the old ones you do.
Starting point is 00:28:08 I love that. So I do too. And you know what the vintage ones do? Do you know how many older couples that like, for just an example, I've had, you never know who your customers are until they say hello to you, really. You know, I assume they're guys. I assume they're probably 30 to 50. But that's a bunch of them.
Starting point is 00:28:27 But there's a lot of really cool people that don't fit that demographic. I have couples that are like couples that are in their. 70s and 80s that stopped building puzzles because now they go and get their old vintage cards and they work on cards together as a husband and a wife like super sweet touching stuff you know what I mean that's awesome so like and that's where the vintage cards brings them in because they grew up watching these dudes you know what I mean now does that soaking process like does that improve grading or is it just a personal view huge improvement you know what I mean yeah you got to do you can't use friction on an old piece of paper. So you've got to do what's best for the card. You know,
Starting point is 00:29:08 card care, right? So you got to, the only way that you're going to be able to, and like the fluids I use, you know, everything I build is archival grade gold standard. And that's why I couldn't find this type of stuff. I know what it takes to build this stuff, but it just doesn't exist for the types of products we work on, you know? Paint, paint and ink on cards from the 40s and 50s is unique compared to stuff from the 70s and 80s. And if you don't know what you're doing, you're going to find out. Kurtz time. That's worth for you, people.
Starting point is 00:29:41 Yeah. You want to know a guy that's put 20,000 hours into this? Here you go. You can go on and admit the wheel again. Yeah, at least. You know, but yeah, so vintage is amazing. So you guys dig into the vintage. And all of these, all of these lessons, Ryan, are on YouTube on playlists.
Starting point is 00:29:59 So if you were just like, if you went to my Instagram channel, you just kind of see what's on my mind today. I have a very healthy amount of ADD, so you'll see randomness all over my daily channels, but all the toolboxes are built on YouTube. I love it, man. What's like the one bit of advice for people or a couple bits that are getting into sort of restoring both old or new, maybe some universal truths? Yeah, I mean, I would think that, for, For me, like if anybody's watching this and you just find it interesting and you're like,
Starting point is 00:30:37 you know, that seems like something cool. I don't think it takes more than that. I think it's like something that I find that you'll do. But it's just like, say the thing, like if whatever you, whatever you like to do, say you like to exercise. You like to exercise probably because it's good for you. But, you know, maybe you have a lot of good thoughts during it. And like it just kind of brings out the best of you. I've had naturally people share before and after and they say, hey, I enjoyed, you know, look at the product actually works or whatever.
Starting point is 00:31:03 But I really find that people that have are built like this way. And if you don't want to do this, if you look at it and you're like, God, I would never want to deal with it. It just gives me stress and anxiety. Don't ever buy this stuff. Don't ever do it. You know what I mean? Like, I know a bunch of people love going golfing. I hate going golfing.
Starting point is 00:31:20 I don't ever want to go. It's like, I'll pass. Thank you. You know what I mean? So same thing with card care. But if you guys watch this and you see some of these before and afters, don't write a story that you're going to screw up and you suck. Write a story that you're like, hey, this is kick ass. going to get good at it and I'm going to learn because this dude like built all this stuff for me
Starting point is 00:31:36 and like made a million videos to teach me. You know, that's what I'd say. And I'll add one for you and you put this on there. It seems simple, but use those worthless raw cards that you've darned that are you know, two cents, one cent and nothing could improve the value test and practice on those. Isn't that the greatest? Isn't that the great? Because when I see my old man bending out like a fender of a 1970 AAR Kuda. He didn't have a test one to go out there. It was like, you nail this shit or it's not going to look good. So it's like when someone's like, oh, I'm not going to be good at working at my
Starting point is 00:32:15 Pokemon's. I want to be like, practice, dude. Get in the game, man. You got unlimited base cards over there to practice with it. I want to be like this tough guy. Come on, don't get me that whining. Maybe the most important question, Kurt, is do we have any kind of whole? sell distributorship so that I can carry this in the store.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Dude, absolutely. Absolutely. You know, that's really, Ryan, like a really special thing that we've had to help grow our company. You know, that's how you kind of check in to make sure you're, you know, you see your returning customers, you see your company grow, but then also like retailers pop up around the world and around the country. And it's, you know, from a guy that works hard for everything, I couldn't thank anybody
Starting point is 00:33:00 more than that. You guys are my people, and I just, I love you to death, man. So thank you so much. Well, we're going to have a spot here at Collector Station, and I'm going to get Bella to get details on that because I want to have it in the store because it's one of those things that you can't unsee and or unusing. Hey, if you've got a half a good bone in your body, you want to share it with somebody. That's awesome, man.
Starting point is 00:33:25 I can't thank you enough for that, Ryan. Hey, man, where can everybody, you know, buy direct, learn more, keep up, watch feed. You mentioned the YouTube, but give all the handles. Yeah, man. So, like, you guys, I'm pretty much at the seat Monday through Monday. You were on eight days a week. But Instagram is a place where I get a lot of direct messages, and I answer them, you know, because I, and I will. They answered this one.
Starting point is 00:33:50 Yeah, I did. That's how you guys got me. So then same with Facebook. And then I'm on YouTube, and then people go through my emails. But Kurt's Card Care is the website. Pretty much you search the word Kurt's Card Care. You'll find me. All right.
Starting point is 00:34:05 So that's, but yeah, if you guys want to watch the weekly live show, I do that Wednesday nights, 10 p.m. E.ST on Instagram. And I'll always grab a vintage card, Pokemon card, and a new card to show love to all my customers and all the stuff that they love to work on and collect. And I also take requests. I write them down all week of what people are asking for, what they will. want to learn. So like I like to be interactive and just like run a kickass fun company that like my customers kind of drive it, you know, like I just kind of facilitate it and just let them
Starting point is 00:34:34 have fun with it, you know, and that's, that's important to me and that's how we do it. Well, you got a fan here with me and everything at Collector Nation. So I really appreciate you for coming on, Kurt. And I love your products. Thank you, Ryan. I am, I am sincerely grateful for that, dude. And I look forward to connecting more, have me back again because I want to get up. on all the projects you guys are working on, and I can't wait to come south and see that wonderful story you're putting together. Exactly. We'd love to have you. It's K-U-R-T-S. That's Kurtz with a K, Kurtz card care. We'll have all the links in the show notes and, of course, on the website, the collector-nation.com.
Starting point is 00:35:14 We're bringing you the best, the brightest, the coolest, the innovative of collectibles and trading cards here on the network. We appreciate Kurt. We appreciate you. We'll see you. you next time on the collector nation thanks for tuning into the show be sure to follow us on your go-to podcast platform and catch the full video episode over on youtube visit us at collector nation.com and follow ryan on instagram at ryan alford now get out there and collect yours

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