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  #51  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:09 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
One, the guy was definitive, direct and honest in his response.

Two, the cards, for the most part, had the prices written on the back.

Three, I had an issue with the frame of the advertisement on the back which I thought was retro in look.

Add these together and I would not ask why.
So you're going to take the word of this guy who you really do not know because he seemed honest and forthright to you over Rhett, Leon and other people who have these cards in hand and have decades of experience with vintage cards???
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  #52  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:11 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by rhettyeakley View Post
Says the guy being completely non-objective and basing his opinion on one guys "honest" (subjective) opinion.

To packs' point I assumed they were not real because by default I am skeptical of new "unknown" sets and purchased none of the cards the first time they were offered on eBay. Only after looking at a handful of the cards in person after the fact and comparing them to known E121-like cards have I come to the conclusion that the cards are original.

Brian, just to be clear there are no "tan" cards... The only reason the two above look different is because one was laying directly on the scanner bed and the other is in a PSA holder.
Rhett,

Thank you for that clarification. So we have cards that are of the same tone. The number of cards now may have only been on one sheet. I was basing my extrapolation on the way they appeared in your scans. Please note one and all I would not remember two different tones from a conversation from 2001 at the latest.

Again, thank you for the clarification.
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  #53  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:12 AM
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Is it possible that the original owner had genuine blank backed W575-1's and put a fake Herp stamp on back of the cards? Therefore, when he stated that the cards were not real, he meant that it wasn't real b/c the Herp back wasn't genuine? (Complete conjecture)
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  #54  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
One, the guy was definitive, direct and honest in his response.

Two, the cards, for the most part, had the prices written on the back.

Three, I had an issue with the frame of the advertisement on the back which I thought was retro in look.

Add these together and I would not ask why.
Number 1 is an opinion.

Number 2 - we all have seen a lot of cards that are 100% real that had a collectors sale price on the back

Number 3 is an opinion

Sorry, these three reasons don't support the absolute statement you are making. I have no stake in proving these cards to be authentic, but you haven't offered any real proof other than your opinion.
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  #55  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:20 AM
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Presumably if people are biased by whatever beliefs would be self-serving then those who have bought them may be subject to some bias of overconfidence in the cards' authenticity and those who have not bought them may be subject to some bias in the opposite direction. Most of us fall in the latter camp. Let's exclude everyone else, though, in the interest of a very conservative sense of the board's opinion. Is there a single person other than Brian here, among the hundreds of us who have not bought them, who believes they are fake? I don't mean that as a rhetorical question; I'm genuinely curious about it.

I too would have assumed it was just trolling, but I've seen Brian posting on here for a long time, and he always seemed like a reasonable person.
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  #56  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:24 AM
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I own one of these, and am quite confident it is real.

Brian, I don’t doubt you heard what you state and that the man who told you that the cards were not real honestly believed it–I’m just convinced he was wrong. Sure he would have an incentive to investigate and would want to sell them for more if real, but that doesn’t mean he can;t be wrong. As others have said, unless he made them himself, instructed that they be made or witnessed their production, his is really little more than an opinion.

I can easily see a scenario where he did not know what he had, and consulted with known resources-- all the catalogues and his fellow dealers-- to come to his conclusion. Please remember that fake Henry Johnson’s and Kendigs were circulating during this time–cards that use the very same fronts as these Herpolsheimers/W-575s/E121s. It was even a bit of a hot button, BOLO type situation within the hobby-- I remember some bad HJs emanating from a Festberg auction and posting about it here if not the old Full Count board back around 2000-2001. I even called Lew Lipset at the time and he spoke of these cards being faked. It could very well be that the consensus of those dealers at the RM show was to conclude that these were not genuine basically because no one had seen them, they were not catalogued and other fakes with the same fronts were then circulating. Add to that any dealer with cock-suredness or bravado barking authoritatively to your guy that he “knew” these to be fake and there you have it. Fake it is.

I do not believe it would have been insulting to ask this man how he acquired these cards or if he knew anything about their history–anything to give you more information. These questions are asked all the time with no disrespect. Of course I do not fault you for not asking, but to place so much weight on such a terse statement is misplaced, IMO.
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  #57  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:30 AM
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Default Another way to look at it?

These cards - in their various guises and ACC numbers/names/categorizations - were used for advertising purposes across a wide variety of product spaces (food, entertainment, clothing etc...) and time - the images were certainly used into the 20's (licensed or otherwise)

As such, they likely went through a variety of steps before they ever made it into distribution, some of which might see the content being generated by an honest-to-goodness print manufacturer using that (licensed?) content for the express purpose of making advertising material in the form of "cards".

For example ...
Back in 1921, Joe Jr (son of the owner of Joe's Auto Body) had a run of advertising material requested, featuring an ad for his Dad's shop on the back of the cards. The ad company ran the "for approval" copies off and gave them to Joe Jr. Dad said we don't have the money for that ... and the advertising campaign died right there, never making it to production. Joe Jr kept the promos, and never considered them "real" because that print run - effectively customer "proofs" - were never acted on, but kept for whatever reason .. Joe Jr - or maybe Joe III sometime later - found them and brought them out.
If they were printed on appropriate equipment at that time, for the express purpose marketing/advertising like other cards of the generation, with licensed images, etc... they're real (to me). If they were printed years later on different printing hardware with different ink, using old images simply as "fantasy" cards, sure, they're fake... I think the empirical evidence says that's not the case.

Maybe some other printer put the time/$$ into a project for reward and it got axed due to use of unlicensed content or some other legalities. Does not change the above statements much, IMO.

I think even the honesty of the guy selling them, but calling them "not real" is sort of moot, if you did not question him as to what he meant by "... they're not real ...", the above example being a case in point... :
  1. If you asked him, and he said "they were a licensed advertising run we were having made by printing company X for our family's clothing store but grandpa decided not to use it..." would you call it a promo, a proof, or simply "fake"?
  2. If you asked him and he said "my dad worked at a printing company - we printed them for the advertising company, but their customer decided not to use them ..." dad kept them because he thought they were neat, but we never printed any more... would you call them "promo", "scrap", "fake" ...
  3. If you asked him and he said "my dad was best friends with an ad/printing company owner and they gave my dad the stuff because they were going to throw it away, but they knew he was into beisbol ... "
  4. If you asked him and he said "dad lived next door to an advertising company and went through the trash... "

Not having any context except your memory about the conversation and no further details makes this a "he-said" conversation. Not that it is not worthy of discussion, but your insistence on that as the key point as to the fakeness makes me wonder if there is not a middle ground somewhere that is more like reality... one in which the cards - for all intents and purposes - are ones that were licensed and printed for a legit reason and qualify as real under most definitions, but were considered as "not real" by the holder because he knew that they never saw the light of day for their "intended" purpose.

Yes, there are equally stories on the "fake" side, I'm just trying to make the point that under the circumstances, outcomes from natural events that might explain both: the quality/reality of the cards, and an involved(?) person's contention to the contrary are not at all implausible.
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  #58  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:34 AM
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Herpolsheimer's in Lincoln...I always wondered if there was any connection, but I think there was one in Detroit too which is more likely where they originated.
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  #59  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:50 AM
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You're killin' me Brian! I consider you a hobby friend but your stance on these cards is completely baffling to me! I just don't think there is anything that will convince you that the guy was mistaken and that these are original. You have no evidence that they are fake other than the guys word which for some reason is enough for you even though ALL evidence points to him having been wrong! I like you so I don't want to beat a dead horse but I hope someday you will actually hold one of these cards and look at it objectively for what it is and you will come to the same conclusion as the rest of us...
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  #60  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:52 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by slidekellyslide View Post
So you're going to take the word of this guy who you really do not know because he seemed honest and forthright to you over Rhett, Leon and other people who have these cards in hand and have decades of experience with vintage cards???
With all due respect to Rhett, Leon and others, yes.

Why?

He was the point of origin.
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  #61  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:54 AM
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Originally Posted by rhettyeakley View Post
You're killin' me Brian! I consider you a hobby friend but your stance on these cards is completely baffling to me! I just don't think there is anything that will convince you that the guy was mistaken and that these are original. You have no evidence that they are fake other than the guys word which for some reason is enough for you even though ALL evidence points to him having been wrong! I like you so I don't want to beat a dead horse but I hope someday you will actually hold one of these cards and look at it objectively for what it is and you will come to the same conclusion as the rest of us...
+1
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  #62  
Old 08-27-2014, 10:58 AM
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Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
With all due respect to Rhett, Leon and others, yes.

Why?

He was the point of origin.
You know this how? You stated more than once you never asked about the origins of them. There seems to be a real cognitive disconnect here that leads me to believe you're putting us on.
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  #63  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:00 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by slidekellyslide View Post
Is Brian being for real? This just comes off as a complete troll thread.

Vintage paper is not easy to come by, nor is vintage ink. The most likely scenario is that this "honest" fellow came across these cards in a collection, could not find them in a book or online and assumed they were fantasy cards and priced them as such.
LOL to the point of hiccupping.

Yes, I am being real.

Guys, the only cards from this set came from this guy. Does this not set off an alarm?
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  #64  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:00 AM
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Brian, you do not know him to be the point of origin, and apparently he did not even claim to be the point of origin. He simply said they are fake. He even could have bought them earlier in the day from another dealer from all we've been shown.

I believe the Herpolsheimer story was posted before, but I’ll give it another go. 1920 was the 50 year anniversary of the patriarch William Herpolsheimer’s involvement in the dry goods business, so it might have been a good idea to revive the baseball card idea from a few years prior. Unfortunately, the old man died in February, 1920. His son then died in April. It would not be unreasonable to assume that the tumult caused by these deaths, or simply the business decisions of those who took over led Herpolsheimer to scrap the whole idea such that a prototype set was never completed or was never distributed. That would explain why no others have surfaced.

I hope our researcher sleuths with access to old newspapers will look into the Grand Rapids papers of the time. These Herpolsheimers make reference to the Boys Fashion Shop being on the Second Floor of the store– a fact missing from the 1916 m101-4/5 Herps. If it turns out that is the correct floor than it is even more likely that these are real, unless the creator of the fakes also went to the trouble of great research some 15+ years ago (with fewer internet resources) to add an esoteric and largely irrelevant fact. Even without this info, though, I simply cannot believe these are fake. The paper is spot on. The photography too, and fakes of that era are usually either muddy or washed out. The gloss matches–very hard to do. And of course the backs look like they were printed by the same company as the Holsums and the Shotwells, with similar patterns, fonts and spacing. Finally and as pointed out, the grouping contained players not then known to even exist in the Holsum or E121 sets. Just way too much here to by rebutted by a simple declaration otherwise.
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  #65  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:01 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by darwinbulldog View Post
Presumably if people are biased by whatever beliefs would be self-serving then those who have bought them may be subject to some bias of overconfidence in the cards' authenticity and those who have not bought them may be subject to some bias in the opposite direction. Most of us fall in the latter camp. Let's exclude everyone else, though, in the interest of a very conservative sense of the board's opinion. Is there a single person other than Brian here, among the hundreds of us who have not bought them, who believes they are fake? I don't mean that as a rhetorical question; I'm genuinely curious about it.

I too would have assumed it was just trolling, but I've seen Brian posting on here for a long time, and he always seemed like a reasonable person.
I think I still am .
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  #66  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:02 AM
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But we can all agree the prices for those listings on Ebay are way too high whether the cards are real or not?
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  #67  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:06 AM
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Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
With all due respect to Rhett, Leon and others, yes.

Why?

He was the point of origin.
This seller could have stumbled across the hoard, found absolutely no hobby references concerning them, and concluded, quite inaccurately, that they were not real.

I see this as the most plausible answer since we have the various knowledgeable collectors who have actually looked at the cards and determined them to be genuine.

Brian (not the original poster, but instead poster child)
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  #68  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:15 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by rhettyeakley View Post
You're killin' me Brian! I consider you a hobby friend but your stance on these cards is completely baffling to me! I just don't think there is anything that will convince you that the guy was mistaken and that these are original. You have no evidence that they are fake other than the guys word which for some reason is enough for you even though ALL evidence points to him having been wrong! I like you so I don't want to beat a dead horse but I hope someday you will actually hold one of these cards and look at it objectively for what it is and you will come to the same conclusion as the rest of us...
LOL. I don't mean to kill you, Rhett , but the horse is dead. It has gone to the knackers factory. The cards are fake. It is not impossible to fake cards. Do I know first hand? No, but this hobby is strewn with fakes and that all of the cards be tracked back to this one man and he states, "They are not real." That is a hard poker hand to beat.

Now, that I have summoned an English term, and I am in an impish state of mind, imagine not a dead beaten horse (sorry SPCA for the brutal mental image), but imagine a dead parrot. I did not buy the parrot, but imagine me coming in with that same impish grin and making my argument. Now for a selection from my sense of humor reference library:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npjOSLCR2hE
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  #69  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:18 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by chernieto View Post
But we can all agree the prices for those listings on Ebay are way too high whether the cards are real or not?
Paul,

Just to clarify, the cards on eBay are Merchants Bakery and are real. The ones we are discussing are 1921 Herpolsheimers which are fake. It is not a popular sentiment as you can see from this post which I have made stray from its original point.
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  #70  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:19 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chernieto View Post
But we can all agree the prices for those listings on Ebay are way too high whether the cards are real or not?
People are getting mixed up here...there are 2 different issues being discussed here...the 21' herps(claimed to be fake)...and the merchants bakery(on ebay...and yes...overpriced)!
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  #71  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:22 AM
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Point of origin?

Does that mean he was the guy who printed them or he was the guy who sold the original lot?

Again, two different scenarios with the answer to each giving a different meaning to the cards. If he was the point of origin means he printed the cards then, yes, they are "not real". If point of origin means he was the seller of the lot then this means the cards very well could be authentic and "not real" means the guy didn't know what he owned.

In 1994, I bought my Star Player Candy cards from an ephemera dealer at a paper show in Louisville, KY. He wrote his asking price on the back of each card in pencil. He told me the cards were originally collected by his Father who had lived in central Michigan as a child. The dealer didn't know who produced the cards (I didn't either. It took me a half an hour looking through the big SCD price guide in my car to find the cards and know they were real).

Now, what if this dealer did NOT know where the cards came from and he had access to a price guide and knew exactly what the cards were. What if he priced 14 of them as real and priced the Buddy Myer as fake and the ONLY reason he did this was because the Myer wasn't listed in the price guide?

I bought all of the cards for what the dealer was asking and only later, when I had time to look through all of them, did I find out that the Myer was an uncatalogued card. Did I think the Myer card was fake because it was unlisted? No. That was because it looked the same as the other 14 cards and was on the same paper.

So, unless the guy you bought these cards from specifically said he or someone he knew printed these cards and that they were blatant fakes, I find it hard to believe, with all of the other evidence presented, that these cards are fake.

David

PS. I don't own any of these Herps, I have never owned any of these Herps and I have never even held one of these cards in my hand. I DO remember when they were on eBay and the conversation about them on the old board when they were listed.
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  #72  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:30 AM
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Leon and Rhett's opinion >>>>>>>>>>> unnamed dealer.
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  #73  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
Paul,

Just to clarify, the cards on eBay are Merchants Bakery and are real. The ones we are discussing are 1921 Herpolsheimers which are fake. It is not a popular sentiment as you can see from this post which I have made stray from its original point.
Thanks Brian- my mistake-guilty as accused.
I'll take a step best and wish you good luck in this discussion & horse beating.
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  #74  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:37 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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But we can all agree the prices for those listings on Ebay are way too high whether the cards are real or not?
Paul,

That is one thing I think we can all agree.
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  #75  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:38 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Thanks Brian- my mistake-guilty as accused.
I'll take a step best and wish you good luck in this discussion & horse beating.
Thank you, Paul. I am moving us on to dead parrots.
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  #76  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:44 AM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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LOL.

I apologize for the delays in response, but there is a ballgame on.

Gentleman,

All of the cards out there are from one guy. I met the guy. He said they were not real. Why? Mistaken? Nope. Who goes to a show with "original" cards and sells them for $1.00 to $3.00 and says they are not real. Then, after the fact, no further examples, save a poor attempt at a Cobb are found. The parrot is dead. The troll is still alive.

Hello, Polly!

This is turning into a classic thread
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  #77  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:49 AM
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I just can't understand how "those aren't real" can make the jump to he printed them... and knows EVERYTHING about their history.

Honesty does not equate to never wrong. Ignorance and honesty are two separate issues as this thread has proved (because both sides of this debate have honest people and at least one side is wrong).

To produce the cards to look the exact same as the other cards from the set is a lot harder than you realize and seem to think through. Have you seen the "void" on a check that is written using small dots? That is because if you try and copy this design the scanner can't reproduce that accurately when reproduced. This is, in essence, what the problem with trying to produce the fronts of these cards is. The halftone used to produce the cards can't be replicated by copying the front of another card and then reprinting it. You would have to have the original of every photo to even begin to replicate these. This is also the same reason why other fakes have been easy to spot.

The only "plausible" explanation that keeps these cards "fake" is the stamping idea someone mentioned, but even that one should be easy to figure out based of the ink used and is easy to prove.
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  #78  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:56 AM
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Isn't it too difficult to distinguish between authentic and reprinted Fro Joy cards? It is my understanding that the Fro Joy cards are no longer being graded because it is too difficult to distinguish between some reprinted and authentic examples.

Last edited by packs; 08-27-2014 at 11:59 AM.
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  #79  
Old 08-27-2014, 11:57 AM
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Quote:
The only "plausible" explanation that keeps these cards "fake" is the stamping idea someone mentioned, but even that one should be easy to figure out based of the ink used and is easy to prove.
The card backs are not stamped, they are printed,which means they were affixed to the back when the cards were on a sheet. As mentioned, the cost of setting this up would be excessive and far disproportionate to any gain achieved by creating one such sheet.
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Old 08-27-2014, 12:03 PM
benchod benchod is offline
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Brian
I really question your recall of the entire story.
You have stated multiple times that they were sold on eBay by a seller in Maryland. That's is incorrect. They were sold by an antique shop in Grand Rapids Michigan. If you have this basic fact wrong maybe you don't remember the other details clearly.

Last edited by benchod; 08-27-2014 at 12:03 PM.
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  #81  
Old 08-27-2014, 01:35 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by benchod View Post
Brian
I really question your recall of the entire story.
You have stated multiple times that they were sold on eBay by a seller in Maryland. That's is incorrect. They were sold by an antique shop in Grand Rapids Michigan. If you have this basic fact wrong maybe you don't remember the other details clearly.
Sir,

My apologies because I do not mean to offend you, but it is you that has your facts incorrect. Herpolsheimers had a shop in Grand Rapids, MI. The cards that this gentleman had were eventually sold on eBay by a seller in Maryland.
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Old 08-27-2014, 01:37 PM
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Default Never kiss a Herpolsheimer's on the mouth

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Originally Posted by brianp-beme View Post
This seller could have stumbled across the hoard, found absolutely no hobby references concerning them, and concluded, quite inaccurately, that they were not real.

I see this as the most plausible answer since we have the various knowledgeable collectors who have actually looked at the cards and determined them to be genuine.

Brian (not the original poster, but instead poster child)
Hey Brian...everyone gets a response from you. Except me. I feel a little left out. Don't you see me waving my arms wildly at the back of the classroom?

Brian (part of the Herpes are for real lynch mob)
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  #83  
Old 08-27-2014, 01:54 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Brian,

My deepest apologies, but there was nothing intentional. This thread is keeping me both busy and endlessly amused with timeout for laughing spurts.

Professor Wagstaff here has seen you and can only answer that this particular dealer was clear in his explanation, "They are not real." That tells me he knows about their history and the handwriting on the cards-I did not ask this either-I presume was his. I know. I know.

So, if the guy states "They are not real," he writes what price he wants for the cards and displays them at his table, it says to me the origin is something he has a clear knowledge of and has priced his cards accordingly. Ask yourself this question: If this guy has so little knowledge of his product, how is it he had every "legitimate" (cough, cough) that has ever been known to the hobby?
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  #84  
Old 08-27-2014, 01:55 PM
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The only thing I don't understand about this thread is why Brian won't even consider that just maybe, the guy was mistaken and didn't know what he had (as others have stated). Like it's not even remotely possible. This honest gentleman (selling fake cards ) could have easily acquired them, had never seen or heard about them before, and thus assumed and truly believed that they were not genuine.

There's zero possiblity of that because he said they were fakes?
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  #85  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:01 PM
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Brian,
I believe Benchod believes these were sold from Grand Rapids Mi based upon the following post from (former?) member Jeff McKee, who was an active bidder when these first appeared on Ebay ten years ago:

Quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Archive View Post
Posted By: Jeff McKee

Hi Leon
You guys (and Julie) could have wrote to me, I know a lot of you know my ebay handle. I was one of the 2 infamous bidders who ran the first set of these auctions up in price, I think the other is a lurker here as well. Hopefully by me posting it will not upset anyone who may have been thinking to bid on any of these cards listed in the future. I did not post about this last time it was brought up because I am in no position to tell most people on this board anything about cards and I also did not have the card I won to post about. When the Cobb(Manager), Johnson (Washington) and Stengel (Philadelphia) were first listed I was as skeptical as everyone else because the backs of the cards are not like regular 1916 Herpolsheimer's cards and there is no number on the fronts. These were being listed as 1930's cards. When the seller listed the other 3, Kid Gleason(Manager), Milton Stock (St.Louis) and Chester Thomas (Cleveland) I thought why would anyone go through the trouble of reprinting cards of common players with a different card back. I first checked the background of these 6 players and the common year for them all based on the information on the cards is 1921. The fronts are the same as the e121 set and the backs are close to but not the same as the 1921 Holsum Bread back, which is a variation of the e121 set. Also on the back of the 1916 Herpolsheimer's card it says

Herpolsheimer Co.
Boys Fashion Shop
Grand Rapids Mich

on these other cards it says

Herpolsheimer's
Boys Fashion Shop
The Home of Boy's Fashionable clothing
second Floor

The seller of these cards is a selling agent who sells items for people who normally wouldn't list on ebay. He is based in Grand Rapids Mi. and the person who is the owner is also from Grand Rapids, which is where it says Herpolsheimers is located on the back of the 1916 card. The owner was given them by his great grandfather who I was told did not work for Herposheimers, but may have known someone who did. I was also told that there are 69 cards in all, with no doubles. Most of the cards are commons with some HOFer's. The owner was willing to sell the lot for fairly cheap until the other bidder threw out a couple of large numbers and the owner of the cards got greedy and wanted more. Given all of the commons it was not worth the asking price for myself to buy the lot since the set had already been broken up anyway, with 2 of the top 3 cards gone from the set with the selling of the Cobb and Johnson. I had tried to get the owner to look into getting these cards accepted in the hobby, by getting them authenticated and doing the proper research in determining the exact year or years of issue. It is only my opinion that if these cards are legit, that they were from an unissued set of cards. I have only shown the scans of the Stengel to one other person on this board and he is of the opinion that the card(s) look real. I also think the card looks all right, but I am still skeptical and I am probably going to see what SGC has to say about the card. So as I have said it is all speculation as to whether these cards are real or fake or unissued. Any opinions based on the pictures?
Jeff

I vaguely recalled that discussion so pulled it up. In doing so, I found a thread in which you made you very first post, 10 years ago, in which you stated then that these were fake and with which others disagreed. Also, in that thread you spoke of the dealer telling you his belief that these had been made in the '70's, some 20-25 years before you would have spoken to him. So again I ask why you think he was the point of origin?
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Last edited by nolemmings; 08-27-2014 at 02:05 PM.
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  #86  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:13 PM
benchod benchod is offline
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Keep posting, Brian
In the last 2 days I've been able to add 5 Herpolsheimers hofers to my collection at rock bottom prices
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  #87  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:30 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bicem View Post
The only thing I don't understand about this thread is why Brian won't even consider that just maybe, the guy was mistaken and didn't know what he had (as others have stated). Like it's not even remotely possible. This honest gentleman (selling fake cards ) could have easily acquired them, had never seen or heard about them before, and thus assumed and truly believed that they were not genuine.

There's zero possiblity of that because he said they were fakes?
Yeah, why was this honest gentleman selling fake cards at all?
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  #88  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:42 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
Sir,

My apologies because I do not mean to offend you, but it is you that has your facts incorrect. Herpolsheimers had a shop in Grand Rapids, MI. The cards that this gentleman had were eventually sold on eBay by a seller in Maryland.
You are the one who has your facts about the eBay sale 100% wrong
The eBay seller was/is located in Grand Rapids. Area code 616
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  #89  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:43 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by benchod View Post
Keep posting, Brian
In the last 2 days I've been able to add 5 Herpolsheimers hofers to my collection at rock bottom prices
LOL. Great! The side effect is I'm driving down the stock market on 1921 Herpolsheimers.
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  #90  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:45 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by benchod View Post
Keep posting, Brian
In the last 2 days I've been able to add 5 Herpolsheimers hofers to my collection at rock bottom prices

Bruce is back!
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  #91  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:46 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Originally Posted by the-illini View Post
Yeah, why was this honest gentleman selling fake cards at all?
Chris,

That question I can not provide an answer to and never will be able to satisfy the curiosity.
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  #92  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:49 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nolemmings View Post
Brian,
I believe Benchod believes these were sold from Grand Rapids Mi based upon the following post from (former?) member Jeff McKee, who was an active bidder when these first appeared on Ebay ten years ago:



I vaguely recalled that discussion so pulled it up. In doing so, I found a thread in which you made you very first post, 10 years ago, in which you stated then that these were fake and with which others disagreed. Also, in that thread you spoke of the dealer telling you his belief that these had been made in the '70's, some 20-25 years before you would have spoken to him. So again I ask why you think he was the point of origin?
Todd,

Can I trouble you for a date on that post? I am a packrat when it comes to e-mails and I may-repeat may-be able to come up with the original eBay seller account.

Thank you,

Brian

Last edited by Brian Van Horn; 08-27-2014 at 02:57 PM.
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  #93  
Old 08-27-2014, 02:56 PM
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Brian,

I closed the window. Just search Herpolsheimer--go to last and then up to the October through December 2004 posts for these various discussions.

Added-- your post was 12/24/2004.
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Last edited by nolemmings; 08-27-2014 at 02:59 PM.
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  #94  
Old 08-27-2014, 03:00 PM
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Unless we know why the original seller believed them to be fake, his statement that they are fake is without any credibility. That is why no one is able to buy into Brian's story here.

My guess -- pure and simple -- is that the seller acquired them from someone who told him they were fake; or the seller had them appraised by someone he trusted who told him they were fake. Any of those people is just offering an opinion as to authenticity unless they printed them or fabricated them personally.

I have a signed T206 Cobb that James Spence told me was fake. Does that make it so? In the hobby today, you bet it does.

If Brian himself does not know who fabricated them, then the best anyone can hope for is an expert opinion. And the experts on Net54 have clearly weighed in on them being authentic.

This is all that matters.
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Old 08-27-2014, 03:03 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by T206Collector View Post
Unless we know why the original seller believed them to be fake, his statement that they are fake is without any credibility. That is why no one is able to buy into Brian's story here.

My guess -- pure and simple -- is that the seller acquired them from someone who told him they were fake; or the seller had them appraised by someone he trusted who told him they were fake. Any of those people is just offering an opinion as to authenticity unless they printed them or fabricated them personally.

I have a signed T206 Cobb that James Spence told me was fake. Does that make it so? In the hobby today, you bet it does.

If Brian himself does not know who fabricated them, then the best anyone can hope for is an expert opinion. And the experts on Net54 have clearly weighed in on them being authentic.

This is all that matters.
The original seller has credibility in my eyes.
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  #96  
Old 08-27-2014, 03:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
The original seller has credibility in my eyes.
I have no doubt that you believe this seller to be honest. Honesty does not eliminate the possibility of being wrong. Your trust is commendable but with out the missing piece, the "why he believes them to be fake", I am afraid that this discussion will go unresolved. He saw Big Foot but didn't shoot him and bring back a body. There is nothing to back up his statement (at least that you have conveyed as yet). I have no dog in this fight but, Brian, you are convinced. Everyone else lacks your conviction in his honesty and credibility.

I shall step back now and watch the merry-go-round go 'round.
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Old 08-27-2014, 03:15 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bocabirdman View Post
I have no doubt that you believe this seller to be honest. Honesty does not eliminate the possibility of being wrong. Your trust is commendable but with out the missing piece, the "why he believes them to be fake", I am afraid that this discussion will go unresolved. He saw Big Foot but didn't shoot him and bring back a body. There is nothing to back up his statement (at least that you have conveyed as yet). I have no dog in this fight but, Brian, you are convinced. Everyone else lacks your conviction in his honesty and credibility.

I shall step back now and watch the merry-go-round go 'round.
Yeah, but this merry-go-round doesn't cause motion sickness .
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Old 08-27-2014, 03:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian Van Horn View Post
The original seller has credibility in my eyes.
I certainly respect your opinion Brian and I know you are very well-versed in vintage cards, but without a "why" or at least a name for this person, this is the Herpolshimer equivalent of trying to prove the Loch Ness monster is real based on anecdotal evidence.
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  #99  
Old 08-27-2014, 03:22 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Thank you, Todd.

Here are parts 1 and 2. To clarify in part 2, I did see the guy setup at the Cleveland National (1999?). I was not part of the first discussion (now stop cheering ):

http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...=Herpolsheimer

http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...=Herpolsheimer
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  #100  
Old 08-27-2014, 03:31 PM
Brian Van Horn Brian Van Horn is offline
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Oh, from December 24, 2004:

"Posted By: BrianVanHorn
The cards offered on eBay are fakes. I have seen these cards once before at a show produced by J. Paul Sports at the Charles Sewald Center on the Robert Morris Campus in Pittsburgh. This was about six years ago and I asked the dealer about these cards. He said they were fakes.

Why else would he say this if it were not true?

Apparently, according to the dealer, they were produced in the 1970's. Of course, as I write this, I have no idea of the identity of the dealer. It was a one time meeting.

Please don't misinterpret my message. I don't mean to come off as a "know it all" or bombastic. This is my first post and I don't want to get off on the wrong foot."

Right after that Leon typed "nothing personal, but you're wrong."

I guess it's just a decade reunion disagreement.
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