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Some time ago I seen a beatles set that had been restored By a professional,they touched up the boys signatures around about 15 percent of the signatures were reworked.
Does anyone have any idea if this is a good idea to have signatures restored and would anyone have any pictures of reworked autographs.
Does it effect the value of the sets or signatures?
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I would think this would most definitely devalue the item a ton... In my eyes it's the same as "going over" a faint signature with a marker on your own...
Agree with Ryan, I would never want an item that had been reinked
no thank you, not in the least interested of this. I would say you might as well by a preprinted signature. If someone else is putting their ink on top it is losing that personal touch, just to brighten it up a bit. Sure, the artist stood in front of it X number of years ago, which is part of the thrill to me, but i'd rather have faded period signatures.
In my view it is tantamount to vandalism. Of course once a person buys something it is theirs to do with as they see fit, but it my right to cringe. Why any would think it is a good idea to have Charlie Nobody go over a Beatles or Mantle is beyond me. I agree with another person in a different thread who said if someone had a restoration done and did not put that in the description it is the same as fraud. Come to think of it why is tracing over a genuine signature that much different than forgery? The person doing it to make it appear better than it is and thus more valuable. As a historian by profession I suppose I find it more objectionable than others. As a collector I would pass on any kind of retouched/restored autograph.
How about restoring pieces.like cleaning up a piece ,example :blotches stains etc.does that also devalue a piece?
Like beauty the "value" of anything is in the eye of the beholder. Personally anything I buy I want "as is" with nothing done to it. I believe there is a growing number of serious collectors that feel the same way. There was a thread here somewhere about removing inscriptions from photographs and the effect on value. I actually bought a couple photographs that upon inspection there was evidence of the removal of inscriptions. I promptly bought replacements for those autographs (fortunately none too rare). If I ever decide to sell obviously I would state I believe the inscriptions had been removed. Not to do so would be unethical in my book. As a general rule if you buy something and intend someday to sell it I would leave it alone and let the new buy decide how to deal with stains etc. If you are dealing with a Ty Cobb baseball do you really want it to be completely white and clean? The patina and stains of an old baseball are part of the history and charm I think. The same with album pages, photographs and documents. As for value I also look for signs of age on older items. I do not want it to look new. The signs of age are part of the process I use to determine if it may be fake or not. So if I see something that looks too good I would pass in a heartbeat. So if you clean an item will there be a buyer if it is rare? Probably it just wouldn't be me.
terrifying and really mega interesting post - thanks for this info Anthony. Did you know some of the restorers then? so basically could some of the beatles albums being currently sold by top beatles experts have been restored without the experts knowing?. so really it is safer to buy a beatles set on a piece of paper than on an album unless you actually knew the seller purchased the album years ago .? If I actually had the money to buy a Beatles album this really interesting post would make me rethink because it seems to be safer to buy a beatles set on a piece of paper ; - but now you have to triple check that all 4 sigs match the year they were supposed to be signed. thanks for the post .
I also wonder how many beatles albums have been sold unknowlingly by all the major auction houses for thousands of dollars which will have been restored in this way?
thanks for this invaluable information Anthony. Another question is whether the major authenticators tell potential clients whether something has been restored or not. However, what is spooky is that are far too many beatles signed pieces up for sale at all the major auction houses so not all of them can be genuine; - it just doesn't add up. Look how many turn up . Really great post
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