flipping for Baseball cards can be enjoyed in many versions@ while holding the card usually your fingers on top and the thumb on the bottom of the card a simple game is heads a winner tails a loser if a tie then the cards stay in the pot until there's a winner
another way is you flip your card and if it lands tails the other flipper tries to flip his card on the downed card but it has to land on it with the matching tails if he mises the card then either of the two become fair game and the pot keeps growing until a card is flipped onto one on the floor and it matches however if a card lands on another and they don't match such as a tail on a heads or vice versa that pile3 is considered dead and the flipper has to find a lone card on the floor for a target. if there aren't any available then whoever's turn it is has to flip his card{usually you try to flip the card as far as you can] out so the next player can try hitting it.
using these examples the games can be extended by adding the number of wins in order to win the pot on the floor or playing for a stack of cards each player risking about the same amount.
i'd like to get some adults interested in this for competition all that bending down is good exercise plus why should just the kids have all the fun and believe me it is a lot of fun
Nothing, the # on the back of a Baseball card is the card # in the baseball card set. Ex. My baseball card has the # 278 on the back of it. So my card is the 278th card in the set.
The duration of Flipping Out is 3600.0 seconds.
Candy flipping is when you mix LSD and ecstasy.
Flipping Out was created on 2007-07-31.
Flipping Out - film - was created in 2007.
The baseball card had no worth. "What is your baseball card worth?" he asked.
They go to baseball card heaven.
his number was 45
Flipping Boston - 2012 Flipping on Ice 1-2 was released on: USA: 28 January 2012
No. Collectible items could add value to the price of a signature such as the cover of a magazine or baseball card but not always. As in the case of a baseball card, generally collectors of baseball cards would rather have a baseball card without the signature, and a collector of signatures will not always pay extra for the "collectible" baseball card. This is why it is not a good idea to have an expensive baseball card signed. You could devalue the price of the card, and get less for it. A cheap inexpensive baseball card that is worth .50 cent for example will be worth more with a noted players signature on it. The collectible baseball card now becomes an item to display the signature, and the bulk of the value will now rely on the value of the signature. An expensive baseball card valued at $200. for example will have the opposite effect, in that the collectible baseball card becomes an item to display the signature. The signature now becomes the collectible item. if the signature is only worth $40. it would bring the price down. It would be considered to a baseball card collector to be defaced and not be valued as a the collectible card in "mint condition." The value now relies on value of the signature and how well the card displays the it. In the example of the $200. baseball card and the $40. signature the baseball card will bring more value to the signature but less than the value of the card un signed. Basically a collectible baseball Card, and an Autograph are two different items. Once the Card is signed it is not a collectible baseball card it is a signed Item. For more information on signed Items and value read my newsletter "How Much Is My Autographed Baseball?" (Link below)
That is the correct spelling of "flipping" (turning over, or somersaulting).
The duration of Flipping Out - film - is 1.4 hours.