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A while back I decided to give Mike Frost from P.A.A.S. a chance to authenticate a few of my Beatles autographs. He was significantly cheaper than many of the other authenticators and I had seen his EBay auction a number of times. I decided to send him this mid 70's Harrison autograph which, in my opinion, is pretty cut and dry a genuine autograph. To my disbelief he responded saying that autograph was in fact NOT authentic! Along with this signature I sent him others as well which he deemed as not genuine. I felt terrible knowing that these were real and I was just taken for my money to the tune of $400.00+ dollars. After I received the signatures I did the only thing one could do. I mailed them off to Frank Caiazzo for a true authentication. As expected, the autograph was indeed authentic. I felt a little more vindication when I found out that his authentication services were puled from EBay. BUT! I just ran across another one of his ebay auctions trying to lure unknowing patrons to use his services for Beatles autographs! I was as you can imagine quite peeved. In my opinion, I would stay as far away from a Mike Frost PAAS Beatles authentication as possible. It is my belief that he has no clue what is real and what is not and I would advise to save your money and go with someone more reputable in this business. Take a look at the example for yourself and you be the judge!!!
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Looks good...
What a beginner's mistake. I don't study Harrison and I knew it was real immediately.
Speaking of being an old-timer, Mike, Roger told me that the Harrison is the style that Joe Long tried to copy in his forgeries. Could that be what's unsettling to you?
to be honest, its irrelevant how long you have been doing a job, its how good you are at doing the job that matters, especially in this hobby.
there could be someone thats been doing it 3 years and have better knowledge than you it depends on how they apply themselves.
this is a text book example on my beliefs that specialist authenticators are the way forward as their coas have more credibility. its impossible to have someone be able to be a specialist in every signature known to man, thus, i dont see why third party authenticators feel the need to take peoples money to authenticate items on which they have no clue about.
to me this autograph seemed genuine from first glance and the reasons given for saying its not authentic on the PAAS letter is ridiculous.
there something similar happening in the uk, however this third party authenticators believe certain autographs are genuine to which we still await their announcement.
Common sense would now be to authenticate what you can hand on heart say you know and swear by it, not claim to have expertise in areas you are lacking or not come across. there is no room for mistakes in authenticity as reputations and businesses are on the line that put roofs over heads.(better be safe than sorry, in this case you are sorry and its bitten you on the backside).
IMO you should have referred this gentleman elsewhere. I really do not see how you can justify the autograph to be shown as not authentic unless it was a print .
However, i am glad to see you have admitted you have made a mistake and been professional with the way you have instantly offered a refund without hesitation, but my point is, this mistake shouldnt have been made in the first place. How many more items like this has it happened to? it really isnt fair on the consumers/customers who are not educated and not knowledgeable . Credibility is key and if i was one of your customers and saw this topic on this forum, id stay clear as it would seem you have not got a clue (not saying you havent just raising a point) and i wouldnt want to waste money on your authentication service if you cannot get it right the first time.
I am sorry with the results, I had found issues with many of the signatures you have submitted for examination especially the 2 George Harrison signed albums. I also found the Beatles signed album page not to be authentic. I then forwarded all the scans to 2 Beatles experts that we use as trusted advisers with P.A.A.S., Both had the same exact opinions that the signatures were not authentic.If Roger has said the album page was authentic, could you please send me any reference or e-mail saying that he would authenticate the signatures. All the signatures also received a thumbs down from Alexander in Germany. Once again we are sorry but we have done a a full examination of all the signatures and have found major inconsistence with the autographs.Thank youMichael FrostP.A.A.S.954 450-4283In a message dated 10/11/2011 5:55:06 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, xperttexpert@gmail.com writes:hi, got the auto.s back andto say the least i am shocked. other than the lennon the others were quite cut and dried. the set had already been authenticated as real by beatles marketplace, nigel lemon, and roger epperson looked at in person and said it was real, the guy i bought it from bob emerson lives in houston. im going to send scans to andrew in germany. somethings not right. i know all these are real except the lennon, but if ya'll think i'ts fake, then its pbrobably realalso. this isn't 1995 anymore where people don't have the means to study beatles autographs with example after example just like you. i don't get it there is more to the story.
Mike, thank you for taking the time to explain your thought process behind your concerns about the Harrison autograph. I have been studying Beatles autographs for 20 years, and the variations in Harrison alone are overwhelming. I am not sure how large your file of Harrison exemplars is, but I would continue to collect examples with all his variations. Below is an example from 1984, with the "s" that you accurately represented as relatively rare in his post-60's signatures. But it does happen. While I understand the points you are making, it seems like a trees/forest situation. when you stand back and look at the flow, letter formation, speed etc of the signature, it just looks and feels right. then you can look at other details, one of the important ones for me is the "rg" formation. In the signature in question, it is right on. most forgers miss it.
What really caught my attention was Mike's point about the prices on the food ticket. If he's right, that they're 1960s prices, that's a mystery that needs to be solved. But if the Harrison is a forgery, I can't imagine there being a better one.
if you were that talented a forger, why would you waste it on the back of an old menu? I think the signature speaks for itself. I would be more concerned if they were 2010 prices.
steve, i obtained this directly from dana. this is the story, it is not 1960's prices. dana was a waitress at this dineyland fast food establishment in the spring of 1977, they were closing up for the night and a gentleman, a young women and another man walked in and dana told them "sorry we ar closed". one of the cooks looked out and told dana , "do you know who that is". dana replied" i don't care who it is we are closed". the cook replied , "that is george harrison!" being embarrassed not recognizing him,dana replied to george "i am so sorry and they staid open late", dana waited on him, and for eveyones interest george ate hot dogs, french fries and coca cola. maybe that is why it does not look rushed?!!
Thanks for the detailed explanation, but I still feel that the autograph in question is clearly authentic. I don't see any problem with the "G" and "E" in "George." I've seen the loop formed in a similar way, and the two letters just happen to intersect in a way that makes it a bit difficult to see the transition from one to the other. I also don't see a problem with the two "R"s, which appear quickly drawn to me. The "figure 8 'S'" compares nicely with the example above, and I've seen it more narrow at the bottom like in the autograph in question. The signature appears to me to have an even flow, with ink blots having been caused by a problem with the pen's ink flow.
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