Does Anyone have a contact with Scott Cornish ( Space Authenticator ? )

Way back in the early to mid 1980's a young Student used to write to me ( yes even before e-mail !!! ) and I tried to help him with his collecting. He sent me three pictures of Neil Armstrong and some U.S. stamps and asked me to send them to Neil's home address and whatever came back I should keep one and send him the others. They all duly came back signed and as I have several Apollo autographs obtained in the 70's and 80's I offered my one for sale in 2009. I received an e-mail from the buyer yesterday saying that as he wanted to protect his purchase to pass on to one of his children ( understandably I would think ) and had offered a scan to PSA/DNA who verified it as not authentic. I never heard from Scott that his two weren't the real deal so would very much like to catch up with him and since he obviously went on to specialize in that field is also probably the best person to ask. If anyone can put me in touch I would be very grateful.

Views: 419

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I would run it by Mr. Zipper. he is very strong and one of the best for space autographs.

Could you or he give me a contact address so I can e-mail a scan across ? Many thanks for your reply.

He will probably read this. But try a friend request.

Ken,

Mr Zipper is Steve Zarelli, the top active astronaut autograph authenticator, who authenticates for RR Auction and JSA. Did you get in contact with him? 

Steve

Hi Steve,

               I didn't realise they were one and the same person until I contacted RR Auction. He viewed the piece and said it matched other genuine examples but it could have either been rushed or somebody distracted him mid-flow but his advice was not to put it through the shredder on the views of PSA. The dilemma I have now is that quite naturally my customer needs to know for the sake of passing a piece of history down to his children that it is authentic. I have two ' experts ' who are at odds with each other. I know the circumstances behind how it was obtained and as Steve has not said it is secretarial or autopen then my feelings are that it is genuine. Other than what my customer now has from PSA giving a long list of reasons why they won't pass it I have nothing really to balance a strong argument for them being wrong. Ethically and morally I could very easily refund my customer and put it through an Auction house if they class it as being genuine and maybe treble or quadruple what I sold it for, but then my customer loses out. If anyone else could give their views on this piece I would be very grateful. This all goes to show just how difficult and complex authenticating can be and also how someone's ' opinion ' can affect both businesses like mine and the buying public.

Regards    Ken.

 

Steve has not said it is secretarial or autopen

Of course I meant to write ' it is Not secretarial or autopen ! Not sure whether the attachment can be opened to view - old age and lack of any technological knowledge or interest means I'm an amateur with computers lol.

Ken,

If Steve Zarelli says your Armstrong is good, you can take it to the bank. But I just reread your post and realized that Scott Cornish was the young collector you sent the photos to Armstrong for! Scott is a member here, so send him a friend request and I'm sure he'd love to hear from you and help: http://live.autographmagazine.com/profile/ScottCornish

Please try to post the photo again, or send it to me at editor@autographmagazine.com and I will.

Thanks

Here is the photo Ken sent me for review.

In my opinion it is a textbook "rushed" Armstrong with one unusual characteristic. The signature is essentially perfect until you get to the bubble-like blowout on the right side of the paraph.

Also note how the small horizontal line at the bottom of the A formation goes directly into the paraph in one continuous line. (Usually these are 2 separate lines.) Doing it in one continuous line is something he did when rushed, and in my view, an unlikely choice for a forger to make.

The contrast is bad, but this in-person exemplar from the UACC study, Neil Armstrong: The Quest for his Autograph, shows a similar rounded "bubble" on the right side of the paraph.

The questioned exemplar was signed with great speed, confidence and is essentially perfect except for one unusual hiccup. Looking at the whole picture and based on a scan review only, I think there is a strong likelihood the questioned item is authentic.

Hi Steve & Steve,

                              My grateful thanks to you both for your help. I have sent links to my customer and have offered him a full refund of his money if he is not 100% satisfied with these findings.

Best Regards

 

Ken.

RSS

Photos

  • Add Photos
  • View All

© 2024   Created by Steve Cyrkin, Admin.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Service