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I can't make my opinion any clearer. What exemplars can you provide that suggest the Ledger could possibly be genuine? I assisted a collector purchase one a while back and this...
Wait for more opinions. Has anyone in this thread thought them good yet?
Really? Well, I thought I gave a clear opinion with several reasons for you to consider. What do you want to hear? I have also told you that you will likely find a course of action if you search here for that source and read the threads and see what others in your position have done - again, I recall some prevailing.
"...very few of these were ever signed."
Not helping your case here. How many genuine signed examples of this poster have you seen and can you share the images of them you found in your pre-purchase research?
I understand, PM. There are about 650 reasons this happened. But even a cursory search online fails to yield anything that look like the "Ledger". You have an atypical signature, at best, from a source whose reputation, such as it is, you can read about and not just here. The terms I expect will be difficult, and there could be reasons for that. Wait for more opinions, but I'd use the time to read the materials suggested.
If you read the terms, they prefer the word of...Drew Max for all non-sports items.
Reading is good :)
I don't know anything at all about this company that issued the COA, but your first move should be to contact them, and tell them what you have and where you bought it. Their reaction and willingness to help you, will tell you what kind of company they are.
I have owned and dealt with a lot of Heath's autographs and a few Bale's as well, I have never seen anything like those on your poster.
The length of Heath's signatures did vary from every letter in both names all the way down to a readable H_th, but the one constant was that his H did look like an H. The inter-connection between the first line of his H and second line made the formation look like an "n" narrow at top and wider at bottom. Then the crossbar could make it appear kind of like a star.
Another note is that after the first year or two of his "fame," Heath would more likely sign in dark areas and right across the middle of an image. Right across his face was more common than not.
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