All right, you sucked me into spending a few hours banging out a few images to show some history of the autograph that I have been most connected to, at least for authentication purposes.
Image one shows his early full signature with nearly every letter, Image 2 shows how the letters started falling away, but the A is still there and mostly fully formed with the same turn that we see in his H. Image 3 is his more modern signatures and most like what you might get today, while image 4 consists entirely of Official Pix signed items.
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Is this the same seller who offered the other vintage "best wishes" examples in this thread?
It is very possible that those two are the same piece, when I could get nice clear images on pieces, I just added them to the file.
I just grabbed a random handful to post.
The handwriting is spot on, details down to the paper color, aging, crop and tape residue. If that is fake, its probably the best fake autograph I have ever seen.
That is what I was getting at...
The one on the index card looks naturally signed to me. The one on blue is very likely a machine-produced near reproduction. Just different enough not to be exactly the same.
I don't see any evidence of the blue one being machine signed Steve, can you elaborate?
Maybe I'm wrong on it, but I'm seeing ink pooling that I would not expect to see.
I think what you are seeing is typical of a vintage ballpoint signature, which makes it even more impressive as a forgery.
Surely the fact the seller has now taken it down from ebay is a guilty sign though?
Just because a seller pulls an item does not imply guilt. A good seller will pull an item to be further evaluated and could relist it in the future. I still am in the opinion that this signature is authentic. Again, if Pete says it is not, I believe, in my eyes, then it is a very good forgery. And, I am all the more educated.
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