Ernest P Shackleton
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,247
- Location
- Midwest
At this point in my life, I would consider this part of "fun at the beach", aka fun at the park. A little catch here and there. Not often enough, that's for sure. There's nothing else like the sound of a hardball hitting the pocket of a baseball glove. I find the whole simple, common process of playing catch to be meditative. There's so much to think about within it, or you can think of none of it at all. Study it or just do it.
I was thinking about this the other day during the game. I remember the first time I saw a Filson wool jacket on the rack. Nothing else like it. The quality. To that young mind, true uniqueness. Though I was a baseball-obsessed kid who was surrounded by baseball gear many hours a day, the first time I ran into a Nokona mitt on the shelves, I had a similar reaction. I probably fell in love with the object in that moment. One of those objects that is so very personal to someone that having more than one, or at least just one that serves any particular function, doesn't get a lot of consideration. After all, you aren't going to carry two of them to a ball game. You'll bring your favorite every time, so why have another?
For a while now, I've had the itch to collect baseball gloves. Not the vintage, crudely shaped mitts, but more modern gloves and designs that are of particularly high quality. Mitts made of leather that require a lot of dedication to break in, before players got so lazy and so caught in the instant gratification culture that even the best manufacturers started using good quality, but lesser, leathers to appease the modern world.* Back when gloves were intended to last a lifetime and become heirlooms. If I jump into it, I'm going to start with a Nokona. I never did own one.
If you have a favorite glove, I'd love to see a photo of it. I have a single glove. I can't really call it a favorite, but it was a very important possession at one time. I question whether it is worthy of a photo. I'll have to think on that.
While I might still have your attention, are there any good forums for glove buying and selling? Where you can gather some basic information?
*I wanted to clarify that they changed the leather quality so the gloves would require far less, or no, break-in time. The trade-off is that the glove won't be as durable and play as long.
I was thinking about this the other day during the game. I remember the first time I saw a Filson wool jacket on the rack. Nothing else like it. The quality. To that young mind, true uniqueness. Though I was a baseball-obsessed kid who was surrounded by baseball gear many hours a day, the first time I ran into a Nokona mitt on the shelves, I had a similar reaction. I probably fell in love with the object in that moment. One of those objects that is so very personal to someone that having more than one, or at least just one that serves any particular function, doesn't get a lot of consideration. After all, you aren't going to carry two of them to a ball game. You'll bring your favorite every time, so why have another?
For a while now, I've had the itch to collect baseball gloves. Not the vintage, crudely shaped mitts, but more modern gloves and designs that are of particularly high quality. Mitts made of leather that require a lot of dedication to break in, before players got so lazy and so caught in the instant gratification culture that even the best manufacturers started using good quality, but lesser, leathers to appease the modern world.* Back when gloves were intended to last a lifetime and become heirlooms. If I jump into it, I'm going to start with a Nokona. I never did own one.
If you have a favorite glove, I'd love to see a photo of it. I have a single glove. I can't really call it a favorite, but it was a very important possession at one time. I question whether it is worthy of a photo. I'll have to think on that.
While I might still have your attention, are there any good forums for glove buying and selling? Where you can gather some basic information?
*I wanted to clarify that they changed the leather quality so the gloves would require far less, or no, break-in time. The trade-off is that the glove won't be as durable and play as long.
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