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Maybe it's a different process, but I don't think these are hand-signed.
Appears to me that many are stating that Mr. Epperson is wrong on both Elvis autographs. I`am i correct on assuming this?
It would be a very dull world Jake if everyone agreed on everything all the time...
Would you agree?
So i should request a refund from the seller?
Jake,
If there's any collectible harder to authenticate than an autograph, I don't know what it is. Online opinions are not marketed as being as reliable as in-person opinions, and at $10-$15 each, most authenticators do them more as a service to help collectors than anything else.
And the authenticators do them based on the size and quality of the images sent to the authenticator, the authenticator doesn't see the autograph in person, and they are only meant to be initial opinions to provide a degree of safety when buying. If you want full authentication, you need to send it in.
If an authenticator knows a person's autograph, they can tell most fakes from an image. But they need see the autograph in person to confirm they feel it's genuine.
Did you send your first Elvis in so he could examine it in person to confirm his online opinion?
I have always believed it is my job to at least try to determine live ink, try to weed out the copies, prints, obvious preprints/facsimiles, stamps, and to try and provide a huge properly exposed high res scan (when possible) when seeking an opinion.
Jake,
Roger and I disagree from time to time. There are lots of examples of that here over the years. When we do disagree, though, it usually turns out that Roger is right. But whether or not I agree with him once he makes his case, I still have tremendous respect for his opinion. He has proven that he is careful, conscientious, fair, honest and knows his field extremely well.
I thought I was wrong on these Elvis autographs after Roger said they were good, until Ballroom posted the other autographs from the same seller that caused me concern.
Autographs aren't made from dies and printing plates like coins and baseball cards. Those are much easier to authenticate because you can identify highly consistent and documented manufacturing characteristics.
Every autograph is different. Great fake autographs often aren't recognized until you see similar inconsistencies in a number of examples, or you examine them in person and realize that they weren't legitimately signed.
That's why provenance, price and source is much more important for autographs than it is for many other collectibles. If something is fishy, or there is any area that doesn't make sense, like a dealer charging well under market for a popular autograph, you need to be ultra-sure they autograph and deal are OK.
Don't lambaste someone for giving you an honest, reasoned opinion that may not be right. Even the best make mistakes, and most of the people calling out the mistakes of legitimate autograph authenticators are people who are upset because their "questionable" autographs were rejected.
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