Hobby Slang Series: What Exactly Is A "Relic" Card?

When it comes to the sports card hobby, there are several terms that often get thrown around in a conversation or among seasoned collectors and can be referred to as Hobby Slang and in this series of articles, the plan is to take a deeper, more informative dive into such terms.
RELATED: Most Essential Sports Cards to Own When On A Budget With that said, one of these terms that regularly gets thrown around in conversation, is referred to in breaks, or is mentioned in social posts and commentary is the term relic and collectors often get asked What is a Relic? or more specifically, What is a Relic Card?.
RELATED: Fractional Investing in Sports Cards Has Been A Failure The term relic or relic card is a type of sports card that contains a piece of memorabilia that is directly inserted into the card itself.
These pieces of memorabilia are generally either player-worn or game-used and are most commonly a swatch or piece of either a jersey, a bat, a glove, a cleat or in some cases even the playing surface of stadium or arena.
Originating in the late 1990s, the idea of inserting relics into sports cards acted as a bridge to bring fans and collectors closer to both the game and the players that they admired.
These insert cards elevated your typical sports card to new heights as it not only enhanced the value of the card itself but also created a level of excitement as collectors werent just chasing rookie cards, they were now chasing cards that contained player-worn or game-used memorabilia.
Over the last 30 years, the hobby has seen the concept of relics and relic cards evolve quite considerably.
When they were first introduced, collectors were elated when they simply came across such cards, however todays marketplace includes serial numbered versions of these cards, color-based parallels of these cards, and most importantly cards that not only feature a relic but also ones that is accompanied by an on-card autograph.
RELATED: Sports Card Vending Machines Return To The Hobby So for those of you who were uncertain about what the term relic or relic card meant, this comprehensive breakdown hopefully offers you some key insight and gives you the ability to start using one of the hobbys most commonly used slang terms.
TOP TRENDING COLLECTIBLES ARTICLES: The Five Essential Baseball Cards of 1973 Topps Would You Rather? Dwight Gooden vs.
Darryl Strawberry Topps Traded Rookie Cards Trading Cards Go Prime Time: How NIL Collectibles Are Changing College Recruiting Ghostwrite Museum takes Manhattan as new MLB-Licensed release debuts The National Heads to Detroit in 2028Heres What to Expect.
This article has been shared from the original article on si, here is the link to the original article.