Tuesday, August 20, 2024

BY SPECIAL REQUEST: AIRBRUSHING & THE 1961 BILL KUNKEL CARD

Today on the blog, a fun look at the 1961 Topps Bill Kunkel card, which was brought up recently by my buddy Thomas (Milwaukee Mauler) because of its crazy colorization:


I absolutely love all the old Topps black and white photo colorizations in the 1950s and 1960s sets, and this is one of them!
The poor guy, as his first Topps card turns out to be some cartoon-like image, obviously a black-and-white photo that Topps colored in. Not airbrushing by any means, but most likely hand-painted to the result you see here.
A much more successful card that utilized this technique would be Carl Yastrzemski's rookie card, as well as his 1961 card which was the same image.
On this Kunkel however, it is funny that while the "artist" went into some detail with the signage in the background, he kind of took a massive shortcut when it came time to work on the uniform, leaving it white except for the number "12" just above the waist.
You gotta love this stuff!!!
As for Kunkel, he put three years in the Majors, going 3-4 in his 1961 rookie season with a 5.18 earned run average for the Kansas City Athletics, followed by a no decision year in 1962 when he appeared in only nine games for K.C., capped off by a 1963 season that saw him suit up for the New York Yankees, going 3-2 over 22 games, all in relief, sporting a very nice 2.72 ERA.
After his playing days were over, he turned in quie a successful career as an official both in the Majors and the NBA/ABA.
While he only officiated in basketball for three years, he went on to umpire in the Majors for 17 years, between 1968 and 1984, umpiring a total of 2227 regular season games, including the game in which Harmon Killebrew hit his 500th home run in 1971, Nolan Ryan's third MLB no-hitter in 1974 and the Oakland A's combined no-hitter on September 28th of 1975, when four A's hurlers turned in the gem against the California Angels.
Not too shabby a baseball life!


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Everything baseball: cards, events, history and more.