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Hello again, the boys signed on the back of a promo card. It’s framed, so I don‘t know which promo card it is. Has anyone any idea, because I don’t want to destroy the frame? Thanks again
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Thank you very much, appreciate that.
Hello,
I would like to come back to the discussion mentioned below, maybe you remember.
I opened the frame and I‘m confused of what I saw. On the certificate from Frank Caiazzo is mentioned, that the signatures are „on the reverse of a Beatles promotional photocard“, but that isn‘t correct.
It’s just an ordinary photo of the girl (Carol?) who obtained the sigs (as Martin Peters wrote in his post).
Do you have any idea how this could happen, because it will cause problems in case that I want to sell it sometimes?
Thanks for helping.
PS: I apologize for the wrong format
It won’t be a problem. Maybe you can email him. I wouldn’t worry about it.
Wow. Martin was right. Apparently it was authenticated in a frame, and it was assumed that it’s a promo card based on the size.
Ok, thank you, I think I will contact him. Maybe he is so kind to change the authentication.
I think Frank will change his LOA for the benefit of Mr. Kite.
in that case, a splendid time would be guaranteed for me
I find it pretty odd that Mr. C didn't bother to open the frame before selling it as a signed promo card. I actually prefer the uniqueness of the private photo but I don't know what "the market" would say. I presume that a signed promo card would generally be thought to be more desirable.
I can't say I'm too impressed with the way the photo has been mounted to whatever support it is on. Hopefully those big white tapes are archival and removable.The vintage clear adhesive tape is also not the best archival-wise but I assume it would have bled through to the signed side by now if it were ever going to. Best to leave all the original tape/newspaper etc. well alone.
Frank likely authenticated the signatures from a photo and assumed it was a promo card or was told it was a promo card. Obviously not sent to him by the original owner.
The small news clipping seems to be describing Ringo Starr who used to own a Ford Zodiac Zephyr automobile. The top of the article is flipped up to reveal the image of the photograph. The article does have the month of his birth wrong, however.
The way the certificate is worded Frank must have sold the signed photo.
In my opinion it just appears to be a generic letter he wrote up, meaning he didn't necessarily sell the item. Who knows. He may have just been playing the odds. Back then at an event where all the Beatles were present a fan was much more likely to have a promo card on hand vs. a regular photo of themselves. In general sellers don't remove signed items from frames. And mainly for this type of reason here. A big surprise could be waiting on the other side. Either it is not what you expected or the condition may not be great.
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