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-   -   July 1996 - VCBC #7, True and Open Card Restoration - An Idea Whose Time Has Come? (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=270622)

Leon 06-27-2019 09:26 AM

July 1996 - VCBC #7, True and Open Card Restoration - An Idea Whose Time Has Come?
 
I would prefer pre war card threads but since it seems pertinent and Peter asked. At least it has pictures of some. :)

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc1.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc2.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc3.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc4.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc5.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc6.jpg

http://luckeycards.com/vcbc7.jpg

Exhibitman 06-27-2019 09:47 AM

I think we have to stop lumping all activity into the same category. Cleaning and stabilizing a card with museum-caliber conservation techniques is not the same as trimming and rebuilding and recoloring. The former is acceptable across the board for art and other paper collectibles like posters and comics. This hobby the exception, and I think that attitude is a manufactured one built on the false foundation of PSA's marketing, which does lump together everything from wiping off a wax stain with a nylon rag to trimming, recoloring and rebuilding as "alterations" in order to sell collectors their service. This hostility to touching a card for any reason is a synthetic development, it is a PSA-perpetuated attitude. It is a manipulated position, an example of good propaganda.

I miss VCBC...

barrysloate 06-27-2019 09:52 AM

Mr. Paul stated very clearly that for the most part card restoration cannot be detected without the use of a black light, which would in fact reveal the work done by turning that area purple.

So how many years at Harvard do TPG's need to figure out that without a black light, or its equivalent, you can't accurately determine if a card is original? This to me is beyond the pale.

Peter_Spaeth 06-27-2019 10:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by barrysloate (Post 1893366)
Mr. Paul stated very clearly that for the most part card restoration cannot be detected without the use of a black light, which would in fact reveal the work done by turning that area purple.

So how many years at Harvard do TPG's need to figure out that without a black light, or its equivalent, you can't accurately determine if a card is original? This to me is beyond the pale.

Mr. Desmond.

barrysloate 06-27-2019 10:10 AM

I'm aware his last name is Desmond, but if someone doesn't know who he is, calling him Mr. Paul matches him up with the man cited in the article.:)

frankbmd 06-27-2019 10:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by barrysloate (Post 1893372)
I'm aware his last name is Desmond, but if someone doesn't know who he is, calling him Mr. Paul matches him up with the man cited in the article.:)

Take Five

barrysloate 06-27-2019 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by frankbmd (Post 1893373)
Take Five

Paul Desmond?:)

Peter_Spaeth 06-27-2019 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by barrysloate (Post 1893399)
Paul Desmond?:)

If only Daniel had only taken five (cards) and restored them. More likely it's countless thousands.

glenv 06-30-2019 05:07 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Here's the Darby that's shown in the article:

Attachment 358264


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