Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen Rickey (1980 Topps – Rookie Card)
Tag Archives: popart
1986 Topps Traded Set
Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen 1986 Topps Traded Set
I’m Sorry (Pete Rose Autograph)
Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen I’m Sorry (Pete Rose Autograph)
F*** Face (Bill Ripken – 1989 Fleer)
Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen F*** Face (Bill Ripken – 1989 Fleer)
Deja Vu (Yogi Berra – 1953 Topps)
Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen Deja Vu (Yogi Berra – 1953 Topps)
1915 Cracker Jack Ball Players
Baseball card art by Matthew Lee Rosen 1915 Cracker Jack Ball Players
View this post on Instagram A post shared by Matthew Lee Rosen (@matthewleerosen) on Oct 28, 2019 at 8:38am PDT //www.instagram.com/embed.js I created a series of acrylic prints for junk wax lovers… the acrylic is tight! Perfectly compliments my plexiglass paintings š Original artwork by #MatthewLeeRosen #topps #baseballcards #baseballcardart #baseballcardartist #baseballart #sportsartĀ #popartĀ #vintagebaseballcards #oldbaseballcards #1986 #80sstyleContinue reading
I couldnāt destroy these perfectly mint & iconic cards in the name of art, so I designed a card display… featuring the graphics from the equally iconic 1986 @topps Traded Set mini-box. #topps #baseballcards #baseballcardart #baseballcardartist #baseballart #carddisplay #sportsart #popart #vintagebaseballcards #oldbaseballcards #baseball #1986 #vintage80s #toppstraded #josecanseco #barrybonds #willclark #bojackson #andresgalarraga https://www.instagram.com/p/B4DFiMKHY93/?igshid=18mwiqfmga4fg
Iconic card, iconic signature. The 1980 Rickey Henderson rookie is the most valuable card from the decade, with one selling for a record-shattering $30,000 at an auction in 2015. @topps has issued several commemorative reprints over the years, honoring one of its greatest cards. #vintagebaseballcards #topps #baseballart #sportsart #baseballcardart #baseballcardartist #popart #rickeyhenderson #1980 #80s #rookieContinue reading
Donruss (@paniniamerica) introduced the Rated Rookie in 1984, then unveiled the iconic logo in ‘85. Canseco made it a sensation in ’86, and popularity grew with the card boom. In ’91, Donruss got greedy and doubled the size of the subset from 20 cards to 40, by issuing a Series 1 & 2⦠featuring differentContinue reading