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Published March 20, 2026 | By Martina F, Collectors MD Community Member
There are certain sets that don’t just bring back memories. They bring back a feeling. For me, 1990 Fleer is one of those sets. It captures everything I loved about collecting during that era – the bright colors, the weird little quirks, the endless subsets, the stickers, the stars, the rookies, and the simple excitement of opening a pack with no agenda other than seeing what was inside.
Some of the more famous error cards in this set have become part of hobby lore. Hall of Famers like Cal Ripken Jr., who was misspelled as “Ripkin” on the Players of the Decade subset, and George Brett, whose card incorrectly stated on the back that he had “10 .390 hitting seasons”, gave the set a little extra personality. There were also some sneaky rookie-related gems tucked in there too, including a Major League Prospects card featuring Kevin Maas, who at the time felt like a huge rookie name. That was part of the fun back then. You never knew what kind of oddity, future star, or weirdly memorable card might be waiting in the next pack.
The 1990 Fleer set was also the first and only time Fleer produced a Canadian edition. It may have been printed in smaller numbers, but because there is still so much of this set around, collectors haven’t exactly treated the Canadian version like buried treasure. So no, I’m not sitting on my retirement plan. But that’s fine with me. The value in this set was never just about money anyway. For me, it was about the look, the feel, and the vibe. It felt like summer. The thicker card stock was a noticeable step up from the year prior, and the whole product just had a charm to it that always stuck with me.
Sometimes the sets that stay with us aren’t the most valuable ones. They’re the ones that felt alive when we first opened them. They remind us that collecting used to be, and still can be, about delight, memory, and the small details that make a product feel personal.
Fleer always seemed to understand how to make a set feel full. In 1990, that meant All-Stars, League Standouts, Soaring Stars, and a 12-card World Series subset that could only be found in the factory set format. On top of that, you had subsets like Players of the Decade, SuperStar Specials, and Major League Prospects. There was always something extra to chase, but it never felt overwhelming. It felt exciting. Every pack felt like it had layers to it.
And then there were the trivia cards with stickers on the front. The team stickers were such a perfect touch. I saved mine, and I still have absolutely no regrets about using one of those retro Blue Jays stickers on my work laptop. Honestly, I’d argue that should count for something in a job interview. Who else is walking around with a 1990 Fleer sticker on their computer? Not many. That kind of flex means something.
That’s why the Junk Wax Era still means so much to so many collectors. People love to reduce it to overproduction, low value, and mountains of cardboard. But that misses the point entirely. The magic was in the accessibility. You could buy a few packs and instantly be surrounded by stars, subsets, stickers, oddballs, and all kinds of little easter eggs. It wasn’t about maximizing ROI. It was about the joy of the experience.
For me, 1990 Fleer embodied what the hobby was always meant to be. It was colorful, fun, slightly ridiculous, and completely memorable. It reminded me that happiness in the hobby didn’t have to be complicated. Sometimes it was just opening a pack and allowing the experience to matter more than the outcome.
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The cards we cherish most aren’t always the rarest ones. Sometimes they’re the ones that made collecting feel pure and joyful in the first place.
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To celebrate 1 year of Collectors MD, we’ve partnered with our friends at @gradersreserve to give back to this incredible community.
We’re giving away 20 Grader's Reserve Slab Guards and 3 of them will include the following cards:
David Coulthard Legends Black Sapphire /10 (PSA 8)
George Russell Rookie Sapphire (PSA 10)
George Russell Purple Refractor /399
This isn’t about hype. This isn’t about chasing. It’s about celebrating community and proving that collecting can be intentional, responsible, and fulfilling.
How to enter on Instagram:
Follow @collectorsmd and @gradersreserve
Like this post
Tag 3 friends in the comments
Comment what you’re grateful for about the hobby
Bonus Entry: Subscribe to Collectors MD on YouTube
We’ll select 20 entries that truly reflect the spirit of intentional collecting on Friday, 4/3.
Thank you for helping us build a space that promotes awareness, accountability, and healthier engagement in the hobby. We're just getting started.
Collect With Intention. Not Compulsion.
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In this episode of The Collector’s Compass, Alyx sits down with Paul Petyo—known throughout the hobby as The Card Father—for a grounded, honest conversation about where legitimate business ends and exploitation quietly begins in the modern collecting ecosystem.
Paul is a longtime collector, seller, reform advocate, Collectors MD community member, and advisory board contributor who consistently shows up in the room with clarity, conviction, and lived perspective. Together, Alyx and Paul unpack a tension many collectors feel but rarely articulate: the hobby is full of “wins”, yet many of those wins are structurally dependent on someone else losing—and that reality matters if we genuinely care about building a healthier, more sustainable space.
At the center of the conversation is a simple but uncomfortable idea: intentional collecting isn’t just about how you buy—it’s about how you sell, how you influence, and how much responsibility you’re willing to take for the impact of your actions on others. Paul introduces the concept of the hobby as a zero-sum environment, explores why “fair deals” can still be harmful in the wrong context, and challenges the normalization of hype-driven selling that ignores risk, mindset, and vulnerability on the other side of the transaction.
The episode also digs into ethics at every layer of the hobby—from card shows and local card shops to streaming and breaking platforms that operate in always-on, high-frequency, app-based environments. Paul shares his “ethical sommelier” analogy for sellers and shop owners, arguing that informed consent, transparency, and pacing are not anti-business, but essential forms of harm reduction. The discussion makes clear that the issue isn’t participation—it’s systems that remove friction, normalize escalation, and leave people without guardrails.
Alyx and Paul also explore what real community support should look like when someone is spiraling. Drawing from real CMD experiences, they talk about response time, accountability partners, and why “posting for help” often isn’t enough in moments of acute distress. The focus stays practical: how to design support systems that help without burning out volunteers or turning care into chaos.
The conversation closes with a thoughtful look at reform, advocacy, and tone—how to push for meaningful change without becoming combative, how to apply constructive pressure without alienating partners, and why being measured doesn’t mean being muted. Throughout the episode, both Alyx and Paul emphasize the same core truth: this isn’t about shaming the hobby—it’s about protecting the people inside it.
Topics covered include:
The zero-sum reality of modern collecting
Where business crosses into exploitation
Ethical selling as harm reduction
Streaming, breaking, and gambling-shaped mechanics
Community guardrails and faster intervention
Reform without losing credibility or clarity
If you’ve ever questioned whether a “win” in the hobby truly felt like one—or wondered how to collect, sell, and participate without contributing to harm—this episode will resonate.
The goal isn’t to collect less. It’s to build a hobby where more people can stay in it—without losing themselves along the way.
Subscribe, share, and be part of the shift toward a hobby where business can exist without exploiting the people inside it.
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