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Everyone does indeed have their own opinion on restoration, but in the last 5 years or so, I have had 2 pieces that popped up in the shop where I work, A Chaplin page and a Babe Ruth baseball, both had faded thru the years and the owners traced over them in darker ink to make them "look nicer."
This was done by a collector, not a trained restoration specialist.....but what exactly is the difference?
I passed on both, new ink added to a vintage signature in my mind, is no longer an autograph.....it's a reproduction, or at the very kindest a secretarial.
If the same 2 pieces walked into the shop with proper restoration done by a great artist......I'd still have to pass. I collect autographs for fun and as an investment.....not tracings.
+1
E
Edit to add: "...but what exactly is the difference?..." - a superb question.
Would or should?
I am sure there is more to learn before any conclusions can be drawn.
Eric
Pete Chuka will correct me if I am wrong, but a simple UV light will reveal all there is to see? I picture Luna Park. Between that and Photoshop...but more info is still needed. Intent and all is unknown, if any. Don't want to be premature. I don't even know who the seller is.
Eric
You probably won't even need any special equipment. Looking at a piece that has been restored under a standard light bulb and catching the light the right way, will show you areas that have been painted over, or areas where paper has been reattached or added.
A regular magnifying glass will show you areas where parts don't match.
It isn't the Beatles, but the Star Wars autograph community is always sending stuff off for restoration. The biggest reason is people like Frank Oz (God's gift to those of us in my age bracket) The man entertained us as children on Sesame Street, The Muppets, Empire Strikes Back & Jedi....then decided to become one of the great under-rated directors of our time. But I digress, Frank will not sign anything without inscribing it to the recipient, and that has been the case for the past 20 years. So every poster with his autograph signed in that time frame is inscribed to someone, and if the piece sells , the new owner gets the inscription removed by sending it off to be restored.
I've seen great jobs, and terrible jobs, but they all tend to be some variation of painting over the inscribed area, and trying to match the art. That paint is there... no matter what, and you can see it by shining a light on it.
Higher end jobs include chopping the area out and replacing the area with another piece from another poster of the same design and stock. Again looking closely you can see the area where work was done , even if linen backed and going all out.
it is kind of like hiring a professional to paint a barn purple, or spray painting it yourself in the end you still have a purple barn.
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