This is the catch-all for the stuff that doesn't fit neatly into one category, and honestly, it's one of the most fun collections to browse. Over 190 vintage collectibles spanning decades of pop culture, sports, entertainment, and Americana.
You'll find pennants, posters, keychains, patches, pins, and promotional items. Branded glassware and mugs from restaurants and events that no longer exist. Vintage lunchboxes, thermoses, and the kind of ephemera that people kept in junk drawers for 30 years before realizing it was worth something.
Sports memorabilia shows up here too, programs, bobbleheads, pennants, and team-branded items that don't fall under jerseys or clothing. Same with entertainment collectibles: movie promo items, fast food toys from the golden era of Happy Meal tie-ins, and branded merchandise from franchises that defined their decade.
Every collectible is photographed from multiple angles so you know exactly what you're getting. We describe condition honestly and note anything that affects value or display quality. These are real vintage items with real history, minor wear is expected and part of the appeal.
Our Las Vegas store at Downtown Container Park on Fremont Street has display cases full of collectibles worth seeing in person. Online shoppers get the full inventory with fast, careful shipping. New collectibles are added regularly, so check back if you're a regular browser, the unique stuff doesn't last.
Questions, answered
Questions about Collectibles
Collectibles at Keep It Classic span six categories: vintage toys, action figures, plush, posters, die-cast, and board games. Below are the questions shoppers ask most about how we authenticate non-apparel pieces, how we grade them, and how to store what you take home.
How do you authenticate collectibles?
Authentication is signal-stack work, not a single test. For paper goods (programs, posters, magazines, ticket stubs): printing process, paper stock, ink registration, fold patterns, period-correct typography, and venue or publisher records. For signed pieces: ink behavior, signing-era pen type, signature comparison against verified exemplars, provenance chain, and known fake patterns. For boxed and packaged goods: shrink type, factory seal patterns, copyright dates, and known counterfeit tells. We cross-check against collector community references and authentication databases before listing. Our default is to under-claim: if we cannot verify, the listing says unverified or as-found rather than asserting authenticity.
Do your collectibles come with a COA?
Some do, most do not. A Certificate of Authenticity is only as good as the issuer behind it. COAs from major third-party authenticators (PSA, JSA, Beckett, BAS for autographs; PSA, CGC, WATA for graded cards and games) carry weight because the issuer stakes a reputation on every cert. COAs from unknown sellers, defunct shops, or generic templates carry close to no weight and we do not treat them as proof on their own. When a piece is third-party authenticated, the listing names the authenticator and the cert number; the buyer can look up the cert directly. When a piece has a generic-shop COA, we say so and grade the piece on its own merits.
Is your inventory professionally graded?
Some pieces are, most are not. Graded cards (PSA, BGS, CGC), graded games (WATA, VGA, CGC), and graded comics (CGC, CBCS) carry the grading slab and number into the listing. Ungraded pieces get an in-house condition grade on the same five-tier ladder we use across the floor: mint, near-mint, very-good, good, fair. We do not estimate what a piece would grade if submitted, because grading services apply criteria we do not control and a number we invent is misleading. If a buyer wants a third-party grade, we recommend submitting the piece after purchase.
How do you handle scarcity and rarity claims?
Carefully. We do not use phrases like extremely rare, the only one in existence, or 1 of 1 unless we can point to specific evidence (limited print run documentation, numbered edition, photo-matched provenance, or known production records). Most vintage collectibles are not literally rare; they are uncommon-but-findable, and the listing should say that. When a piece truly is scarce, the listing names the production window, the documented run size if known, and the basis for the claim. The strongest scarcity argument is usually condition rarity, not absolute rarity, and we frame it that way.
How do you grade collectible condition?
Five tiers across the board: mint, near-mint, very-good, good, fair. For paper, condition tracks creases, tears, edge wear, surface fading, foxing, tape residue, writing, and missing pieces. For three-dimensional collectibles, condition tracks paint loss, stress marks, missing accessories, packaging integrity, and any restoration. The grade is set after hand inspection and photographed from the angles that show the piece honestly, including any flaw worth seeing at full size. A near-mint paper piece can ride in a good-condition frame and the listing will say so.
Where do you source collectibles?
Estate buys, collector deaccessions, walk-in offers, and curated picks from Las Vegas and regional networks. Provenance is recorded internally for higher-value pieces and is shared in the listing when it materially supports the piece (signed at a known event, deaccessioned from a known collector, photo-matched to a documented use). We do not list pieces with manufactured provenance and we do not buy from sources we cannot vet. The floor moves slower as a result and that is the trade we make.
Can I see a collectible in person before buying?
Yes. The shop is at 707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor of Downtown Container Park in Las Vegas. Walk-in hours are Monday through Thursday and Sunday 11:30a to 8p, and Friday and Saturday 11:30a to 9p. Online inventory and floor inventory are the same pool. A piece you see online is the piece on the shelf, and a piece in the shop may already be reserved if it has been pulled for a buyer. Higher-value collectibles are kept in case displays and a staff member will pull them for inspection.
How do you ship higher-value collectibles?
Orders over $200 ship signature-required at no additional cost to the buyer. Orders over $500 ship fully insured to declared value, also at no additional cost, with adult-signature confirmation required at delivery. Slabbed and graded pieces ship in their slabs inside protective sleeves inside a rigid inner box, double-boxed for transit. Paper goods ship in rigid mailers or between corrugated stiffeners; signed pieces ship in flat rigid mailers or boxed depending on size and value. Outbound US ground shipping is free on orders over the threshold listed at checkout. Tracking and updates are emailed at every step. International orders require a message to the shop before purchase.
What is your return policy on collectibles?
Online orders carry a 14-day return window from delivery. Returns ship at the buyer's expense and a $7 return-shipping fee is deducted from the refund. The fee does not apply if the piece arrives damaged in transit, the wrong item ships, or the listing materially misrepresented condition or authenticity; in those cases we cover the return label and refund in full and issue a prepaid label. In-store purchases are exchange or store credit only; collectibles sold in person are not refundable. Pieces returned must arrive in the same graded or ungraded condition they shipped in; slabs cannot be cracked open and re-submitted before return.
Do you buy collectibles from the public?
Selectively. We focus on categories where we can grade, photograph, and sell well: sports memorabilia, wrestling, video games, VHS, vintage toys, music collectibles, and adjacent paper goods. Walk-in offers at the shop get a quick read. Larger collections and estate situations are handled by appointment. Higher-value pieces require in-hand inspection; we do not make firm offers from photos alone on signed or third-party-graded items because the difference between a real piece and a strong fake is often invisible at photo resolution.
How do you handle suspected fakes or replicas?
If a piece raises authenticity concerns during intake, it does not go on the floor. If a buyer brings a piece in for an opinion, we share what we see and what we cannot verify, in plain language, and we recommend third-party authentication for anything beyond our confidence range. If a piece on our floor is later identified as inauthentic by a credible source, we make the buyer whole. We would rather pass on a real piece we cannot prove than list a fake we hope is real.
Every piece in this collection earned its spot through hands-on sourcing, condition grading, and a lot of late nights. We pull from estate sales, dead-stock attics, and the occasional miracle. If it is here, we trust it.
One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.One of one.Ships from Las Vegas.
Friday Drop
Friday at 10am Pacific. One drop. No filler.
We send one email each week with the new finds and the back-room rotations. Forward-only from sign-up.
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