We are an eBay affiliate and may be compensated for clicks on links that result in purchases.
This is a nice postcard. A mother met Elvis at his home in Bad Nauheim in Germany to get the autograph for her son. She sent it back to him and telling him so on that postcard. How on earth could the authenticity of this one could be denied by Epperson - when he was asked by a friend of mine? (I know Eivis signed a bit different - sloppier - in Germany due the large number of autographs - but this document is perfect.) Does anybody believes the mother was a perfect faker in 1959?
Tags:
I've told this story before, but I'll tell it again. My friends mother was a hairstylist. She worked with a woman who was really old, and told a story about Elvis. He had come in for a haircut. An hour later, a guy called and wanted to know if Elvis' hair was still on the floor. It was, and he said he'd buy it. He was on the phone, and said he'd be there in 30 minutes. She swept it all up, and he gave her $500 for the bag of it.
Well, he called back a few hours later, asking if he got it all. She said yes. But a few days later, a different person (she thinks) called to ask about Elvis hair. He offered her a few hundred dollars for some, and she said "Okay, come on by."
So, what did this lady do? She got black hair she found on the floor in clumps, bagged it, and made a few hundred dollars. That guy asked if Elvis often came in there. He was only there once, but she said, "Yeah, once in awhile." He said, "Next time, save his hair, and call me at this number, and I'll buy it."
So, every few months she called this guy, with black hair (never Elvis, as she never saw him again), and she made thousands doing this.
Now, guess what? That woman is now dead, but there was a time she was a sweet, little old lady. People could say "Why would she lie? Why would she go thru such lengths? She has a picture cutting Elvis' hair, it has to be real."
Yet...only the first bag sold was real.
They can be sweet old ladies...or guys that can write in German...forgers and people that want to make money, will do ANYTHING.
And...let me add something to all of this. What in the world...do you think Roger Epperson has to gain by poo-pooing an autograph? What does he gain by having RR refuse to sell it, or authenticate it?
I know what is possible - but think about:
1. you need to find a 1958-1960 Bad Nauheim stamp canceled Elvis postcard
2. pay several hundreds of USD do clean the card from the previous handwriting by a professional restaurer
3. then you have to add a perfect Elvis on top
4. to finish you must add a handwritten story on the card
5. and with this effort you might win a few bucks after all your costs.
I have no doubt that Roger has seen a lot and I have no doubt that there are good fakers around. In addition there are so many Elvis signature styles around who might fit with that Bakker guy. I know that most US experts doubt most of the German Elvis autographs because due the large amounts of autographs he gave they look a bit different than the ones he wrote before (younger!!!) in the States.
If you think about the cmplete story above - the doubt is ridicolous.
Ok - if you all want to believe that someone is faking 2 stampers and a signature that is written upside down - I am giving up.
There is no need to do so as there are a lot of genuine autographs on blanc postcards and no need to do such an effort.
I can repeat myself - Elvis was around each day for half an hour signing autograps and I knew someone who had around 50 autographs by Elvis received over several weeks when the kid was on a childrens cure opposite Elvis house.
Sorry, I am not in US but I also think your autograph is fake (in my opinion).
If you doubt Roger opinion, get a quick opinion from PSA/DNA or Rich Consola.
What's interesting is that the Elvis signature intersects with the cancellation stamp. So, they're forging an Elvis signature over an old ink stamp in such a way that you can't tell that the stamp came first. It gives the appearance that Elvis signed in the blank area not knowing that it would eventually receive a cancellation stamp.
Very simple. This might be a signature that is not 100% that some people are used to it (and don`t forget all these German autographs were signed while standing or leaning on the wall of his house surounded by a crowd of kids) and so one needs to construct the theory that EVERYTHING ELSE must be faked aswell. From the 2 stampers, to the stamp, the story etc...
To proof the theory of the faked postcard, stamp etc. one needs to have the original in hand - not just a scan.
The experts in Germany have a different opinion to the subject. No problem.
Thorsten I would add to this discussion that I too don't like your signature.
And I will suggest this...if you take the time to send it to Mr. Rich Consola...and you only need send him the images through email...he would tell you the very same thing that Roger is telling you...that it is a very slick effort to fool people.
The creators have made this look a bit elaborate...they've gone the extra kilometer to dress things up here but that does not change the hand writing.
Thanks - it is not my signature. I just needed the opion for a friend. I don`t have more than this scan.
Posted by CJCollector on November 11, 2024 at 6:03pm 0 Comments 1 Like
Posted by CJCollector on November 9, 2024 at 2:32pm 7 Comments 0 Likes
Posted by CJCollector on October 30, 2024 at 3:13pm 2 Comments 0 Likes
© 2024 Created by Steve Cyrkin, Admin. Powered by
Badges | Report an Issue | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service