412, that's insane! That's probably among the top 10 most decks for anyone on these forums (after people like Alex, Don, Vmagic, TigerKnee etc.) Do you own any vintage decks?
Yea i just can't get enough. Unfortunately I don't believe I have any vintage decks. What would classify as a vintage deck?
I'd say a deck that's at least 20-25 years old. An early nineties deck would be vintage, anything older would be vintage, anything from around mid-nineties to present day would NOT be vintage.
I currently own somewhere near 500 different deck designs and well over a thousand cards in total. Five vintage decks. The oldest is 120 years old, give or take a year.
Wow that's alot of decks. How do you guys store your decks? I'm currently thinking of replacing my current method which is storing them in these plastic containers on shelves.
I don't even have plastic containers. A plastic container with a few dessicant packs would be fine in many environments, especially if the container seals air-tight. I'm going to need a better solution soon, because my shelves are running out of space. (My fiancee is going to want to kill me...)
Only use a dessicant if you live in an area that tends to get humid rather than arid; cards actually need a certain amount of moisture in them to function. Dried-out paper tends to be brittle. A dehumidifier in the room where they're stored would probably cover all the bases (or a humidifier in a drier, desert-like place).
No, I didn't win the lottery, unfortunately. I just used up all my savings and Christmas and Birthday money from the past 5 years. Totally worth it
You should try using shoe boxes to store cards. It's you're not trying to display them, it's nice, cheap, and protects from humidity and other stuff that could damage decks. Plus, it fits 40 decks perfectly, and if you open the lid, it looks very nice.
Five years of savings? Wow. I'm kinda speechless.
Shoe boxes are great in some circumstances, but in places with high humidity, paper-eating insects or a potential for flooding, they'd be a disaster waiting to happen. Plastic containers sound good, particularly if you have ones that close air-tight. They're more impervious to the assorted enemies of paper products.