![]() |
Very amusing thread. To try to keep it entertaining, here are a few theories:
1. Brian is trying to save face – he is remaining firm in his belief the 1921 Herpolsheimer's are fakes because he holds a ton of regret because he didn’t buy the entire lot of 39 cards for about $85 total at the show in 1999. ……or…… 2. There were actually 40 cards and the extra card was a second Ruth in better condition. On a whim, Brian bought it for $5. He keeps pushing the thread as a genius move for increased interest in the set, ahead of selling his card for good money. Brian’s post #279, “The "1921" Herpolsheimer cards are fakes, but will probably have more findings in the future. Wow, the possibilities. I'll leave out the incentives for the possibilities because they are obvious.” This is satire...I don't know of more Ruth examples. ……or…… 3. Brian never attended that show in 1999 and has never seen the first group of cards before they were sold a while back. The wizard-like, wand-waving “dealer” was just a dream. So just trolling to troll? ……and the truth…… 4. Being more serious now….Rhett explained in his post #218 that the checklist of players match perfectly with those included in other similar 1921 sets. The previously unknown subjects (the new 1/1s) which were found in this 39 card group confirm Rhett’s theory. Considering how far the knowledge in the hobby has advanced since the 1970s through the internet, shared resources and die-hard collectors like you; Rhett is also correct that these cards could not have been made in the 1970s. Logically, the cards are original, they date back to 1921 and are pretty rare. “They’re real…and they’re spectacular!” |
Quote:
2. Ball two 3. Ball three 4. Once again from the link in yesterday's post 240 which was originally meant to dispel my argument: https://archive.org/details/LanstonM...e/n23/mode/2up A typographical specimen booklet containing borders and ornaments for casting on the Lanston Monotype Composition Caster, Lanston Monotype Type-Caster, Lanston Monotype Giant Caster and Monotype-Thompson Type-Caster. This booklet is from a Lanston Monotype specimen book (binder) bearing the general title "Monotype Type Faces." It is undated, but based on internal evidence elsewhere in the binder it is from the late 1930s or early 1940s. A set can be faked and by a person who works as a printer. Thank you for the walk. I enjoyed advancing to first base. LOL! Only a little below 29,700 before we reach 30.000 posts for this topic. :cool: |
Quote:
It was my post, and you keep bringing it up, so I guess I'll chime in again. It dispels your argument that the disco border was from 1970s. "It doesn't look like a pattern from the 1920s, but an imitation for the 1970s." It wasn't, it was from at least the 30s or 40s. It's why I put that paragraph in the post. |
I hate to ask again, but can you please explain why someone finding a matching border specimen from 1930's-1940's means the cards are fake?
All it means is that the border did not originate in the 1970's. It does not mean the border could not have existed earlier. I understand that a set can be faked. Any set can be faked. I am just asking why you think this set is faked (besides the fact that someone else said they were fake). |
Quote:
1930s-1940s minus "1921" equals upper teens to low twenties in years difference from when the design first existed and the argument for the card's year. In other words, fake set |
Brian,
Why would you destroy your reputation in the hobby over something as dumb as this? It’s painful to watch. Please stop. |
Quote:
We all agree that the 1921 Holsum Bread cards are real and from 1921 (don't we?). And yet that border pattern is in the book as well. |
Quote:
I apologize, but if ruining my rep saves people from getting ripped off so be the matter. Just a reminder to you about your accusations about Bill Mastro, the criticism you received by the masses on this board and the fact you were correct. |
Quote:
https://archive.org/details/LanstonM...e/n23/mode/2up A typographical specimen booklet containing borders and ornaments for casting on the Lanston Monotype Composition Caster, Lanston Monotype Type-Caster, Lanston Monotype Giant Caster and Monotype-Thompson Type-Caster. This booklet is from a Lanston Monotype specimen book (binder) bearing the general title "Monotype Type Faces." It is undated, but based on internal evidence elsewhere in the binder it is from the late 1930s or early 1940s. The last time I checked late 1930s or early 1940s eliminates 1921 in origin. |
Here's a few thoughts I have on them.
I've seen a few things related to memory and how two people can recall the same event differently, or a person can combine memories into a single inaccurate one. I think that's what we have here. Were there fakes of that group of sets made in the 1970's? Yes, I own one. Is it possible a dealer would have ended up with a bunch of them having thought they were real? Yes. But here is where it gets odd. The 70's fakes didn't have Herpolshimers backs. Given those facts, a few possibilities A dealer had a bunch of the fakes, and a later dealer sold a group and those were remembered as the fakes, but it was two different lots Or A dealer had a big lot of Herpolshimers, but not finding them in any references, believed them to be fake. (I used to really like dealers like that.. "it's not in Beckett so it's fake or worthless") Or Someone had a bunch of blank backed cards either fakes or originals, and added an ad back. Or Someone outright faked a set in small quantities. All are possible, The first two seem somewhat likely. The last..... I think is highly unlikely. Fakes/reprints in general have been poorly made. Wrong stock, wrong process, wrong inks etc. To fake this set, you'd have to have all that stuff right. Plus Youd need to know the checklist. Which as it's been pointed out isn't precisely known and certainly wasn't in the 70's. (My fake is both poorly made, and has the wrong back... ) Hardest perhaps would be having originals to copy. Is it possible to make a typography plate that's a duplicate of the original, right down to the exact halftone so the dots in the pattern would match up? Yes Is it likely a hobby printer could do it at home? Or that a professional would spend the required effort on making plates for 30-80 individual cards (likely at least a few days work. Then only print a handful of sets? AND Have the presence of mind to produce imperfect cards with deliberate offset transfers? That would be some world class fakery at any time. And someone with the ability to make that work back then would be better served to produce the same quality fake for a smaller group of cards. Or a different set entirely. Not a fake of a very obscure set made in the single digits and doled out over the course of decades. and somehow inserted into very different situations in different places. Consider what similar cards went for back then. My fake cost me $2 RETAIL in 1978. I'm still amazed someone thought it was worth the effort. It makes no sense in any way. The border... While the design book may be from the 30's-40's, the actual type elements could have been around for a very long time. Type is similar to industrial hardware. While I was at the hydraulic place, I worked on stuff that was fairly old. One jack was made in 1945, and that model could still be bought new well into the 1990's. A common bicycle hub was first offered in 1938. Had a minor change a year later, then no real changes until 2000... 62 years with only minor cosmetic changes, Parts bought new in 2000 would fit a hub from 1936. (also a fine example, as I recalled the intro date as 1935) I would not be at all surprised that that border type was much older than 1920's. There's so much that says these are real, I have to think one of the options where the memory of the dealer involves other cards, or that the dealer was mistaken seem to be very likely. And a very appropriate card. https://www.net54baseball.com/pictur...pictureid=2226https://www.net54baseball.com/pictur...pictureid=2227 |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Are you also saying 1921 Holsum Bread cards are fake? Because that pattern is in the book, which using your logic means it eliminates 1921 in origin. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Now, as for the Herpolsheimer "back" similarity on the website link: https://archive.org/details/LanstonM...e/n23/mode/2up A typographical specimen booklet containing borders and ornaments for casting on the Lanston Monotype Composition Caster, Lanston Monotype Type-Caster, Lanston Monotype Giant Caster and Monotype-Thompson Type-Caster. This booklet is from a Lanston Monotype specimen book (binder) bearing the general title "Monotype Type Faces." It is undated, but based on internal evidence elsewhere in the binder it is from the late 1930s or early 1940s. So: 1.) An honest dealer waiving his hand over the case in May 1999 indicating the cards are fake. 2.) The pattern on the back that looked and still does like a disco floor or coffee table (also from the 1970s) pattern. 3.) Reference to above: It is undated, but based on internal evidence elsewhere in the binder it is from the late 1930s or early 1940s. 4.) First fakes of pre-WWII ever. No. 5.) Possibility of a person who works as a printer who has knowledge of cards including a love of Pre-WWII back in the 1970s. What a concept. A printer who collects cards and the thought of producing a group of the cards with a pattern which he may have seen on a disco floor which inspired him. The guy would have access to paper from the 1920's. Still, paper from the 1920's and pattern from the late 1930's or 1940's. Oh, we have the basis of a movie here. Alan Alda, however, is too old and Mr. Mint can no longer sue him. Oh, but I digress. My accurate memory despite a cold and Stage 2 Astrocytoma (Brain Cancer) doesn't get in the way. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
For those from Pittsburgh, this would have scared Chilly Bill Cardille. For the rest of you look him up. I miss him as well from 1250 am. |
Quote:
The cards are fake. My apologies about your Cobb. Happy Holidays |
Quote:
So, to be clear, the Holsum Bread cards are real even though the pattern was found in a binder from the 1930's-40's because they have been known for years (I guess longer than the 24 years the Herpolsheimer's cards have been known). The Herpolsheimer's cards are fake because someone in the 1970's decided the best way to make fake 1921 cards was to use a pattern from the same binder which looks (to you) like a disco floor. Plus the dealer said they were fake (you said "waiving" again, so I guess I will stop asking you to stop). Plus it is possible for a printer to make fakes. Plus fakes exist of other sets. I guess we are back at an impasse. And I hope you were kidding about having brain cancer (that would be in bad taste, but at least you wouldn't have it). But if it is true, I only wish the best for you. |
Quote:
You seem to have been a bit tongue-in-cheek with some of your posts, so I also hope that you are only kidding about brain cancer. I don't know you outside of this board, so I can't really gauge if this is your sense of humor or not. If you are serious, then I sincerely also wish you the best with beating it and recovery. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
"Brian, You seem to have been a bit tongue-in-cheek with some of your posts, so I also hope that you are only kidding about brain cancer. I don't know you outside of this board, so I can't really gauge if this is your sense of humor or not. If you are serious, then I sincerely also wish you the best with beating it and recovery." -me, two mins ago |
1 Attachment(s)
Cold habit. Still waving hi.
The Holsum's were known to exist. The Herpolsheimer's outside of the 1916 set, were not, until the dealer in my case in May 1999 shook his hand over them and said they weren't authentic/real or just plain fake. Your choice. "The Herpolsheimer's cards are fake because someone in the 1970's decided the best way to make fake 1921 cards was to use a pattern from the same binder which looks (to you) like a disco floor." You're making an assumption. The person may have seen the dance floor and the pattern or saw the pattern before going to press. Oh, did I give my uncle's background away again? Oh, so sorry. LOL. "Plus the dealer said they were fake (you said "waiving" again, so I guess I will stop asking you to stop). Plus it is possible for a printer to make fakes. Plus fakes exist of other sets." Got it as long as printer is in reference to a person and not something next to a desktop or laptop. "I guess we are back at an impasse." Hallelujah! This from an Agnostic. When weren't we at an impasse? "And I hope you were kidding about having brain cancer (that would be in bad taste, but at least you wouldn't have it). But if it is true, I only wish the best for you." No, I announced that on Net54 on December 25, 2020 and feel free to e-mail me for a fascinating attempted effort to vote for Alfred E. Neuman on November 3, 2020 followed by brain surgery on December 1, 2020 at UPMC Presbyterian Hospital for a 2 cm+ by 1 cm + by 3 cm + brain tumor. I asked the doctors to wake me for the Tuesday afternoon game that day. Yes, December 1, 2020 was a Tuesday and because of Covid the game was rescheduled to 4:00 p.m. My brother said he was leaving because I wasn't waking up and I told him that I was awake and as I spoke the words JuJu Smith-Schuster caught a touchdown pass. Not a bad way to awaken. Other members on this board now of this story. Waving goodbye here and look forward to your next post. :) The guy in the photo is not me. |
The earth is flat (as I wave my hand over my phone).
In 20 years, I hope someone puts as much effort defending my statement as Brian has put into the statement from “the unnamed dealer” from 20 years ago… This thread feels like an “argument” with a flat-Earther. No amount of evidence will dissuade them. Brian is exhibiting a deep distrust of many knowledgeable experts (akin to scientists) on this forum. How can we rebuild this trust, Brian? I am truly worried about you. |
Quote:
Wow! November 28, 2023 at 12:52 p.m. I have a ringing job endorsement by Jeffrey. Oh, that's right. I've found a way to not to have to work a job since November 1, 2013 and I am on no government aid or disability. Sorry, Jeffrey, but I'll have to pleasantly turn down your ringing endorsement. That would have really stood out. No offense. Happy Holidays! |
Quote:
|
Moderated debate at the Net54 dinner in Cleveland
|
Quote:
Thank you, Curt. No change since the surgeon got 91-95% of the tumor in the left side of my brain during surgery at UPMC Presbyterian on December 1, 2020. Went through six months of radiation every weekday and a chemo capsule in my apartment each evening. Originally on November 3, 2020 in the emergency room at St Clair Hospital I asked the doctor the prognosis and at 11:43 (this is my time memory which drives my sister-in=law up a wall) I was told 5-7 median. I turned my head to the right to my brother and told him immediately I was going to be around 30 years. I approach this battle like a barroom brawl. Everything is legal and if I have this SOB down, I am not allowing time for it to get back up. The tests over the past three have backed my statement to my brother. The only thing in the six months that annoyed me is that I was restricted from driving which is completely understandable. It, however, nearly interrupted a tradition I have held since 2004. My father died January 8, 2002. He was cremated. We interred him after his birthday in 2003. Every May 11 from 2004-2020 I traveled from Pittsburgh to Fremont/Ballville, Ohio to pay respects. Because of the cautionary period I was at risk of missing it, but a friend volunteered and drove to and from. I will always be appreciative. Next year would have been my dad's 99th birthday and 2025 of course is a date I am missing at no cost, so to the Stage 2 Astrocytoma the barroom brawl is on. |
Quote:
Sorry to cost the lawyers cross-examination. Still, feel free to look back on my posts here and in 2004 and try to find a contradiction. Good luck. There is better money betting on the Pirates winning a world series under Bob Nutting's ownership. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I think I understand now
Can’t speak for the rest of the group, but the posts from this morning have helped to eliminate a lot of my confusion.
|
Quote:
First, Happy Holidays. I am sorry you feel that way, but from what i have experienced with the cards, although brief, they are fake, and I stand by that assertion. |
Folks,
Feel free to pull this up in 2004 in addition to now. Nothing in my opinion or accounting of matters has changed. 19 years. No changes. Just additional fraudulent cards. |
Quote:
|
This “debate” has become hilarious in its absurdity.
The only part I feel bad for is the next person that finds some REAL 1921 Herpolsheimer cards. They will potentially have to wade through this mess of a thread and read Brian’s comments that are not based on any actual evidence. It is just bad for card scholarship to have this amount of misinformation and confirmation bias (by Brian) out there. I echo Jeff’s thoughts on this being a painful thing to watch. |
Would someone please just threaten to sue Archive and bring this full circle?
|
Quote:
Still referring you back to post 240 which you haven't answered. https://archive.org/details/LanstonM...e/n23/mode/2up A typographical specimen booklet containing borders and ornaments for casting on the Lanston Monotype Composition Caster, Lanston Monotype Type-Caster, Lanston Monotype Giant Caster and Monotype-Thompson Type-Caster. This booklet is from a Lanston Monotype specimen book (binder) bearing the general title "Monotype Type Faces." It is undated, but based on internal evidence elsewhere in the binder it is from the late 1930s or early 1940s. So, buying Herpolsheimer cards supposedly from 1921 with backs from the late 1930s or early 1940s is a good investment? |
Quote:
The backs are not from 1930's-1940's. The binder is from 1930's-1940's. There is no way to know how old the back designs are just using the binder as evidence. The binder also has a border that we all agree was used on legitimate 1921 Holsum Bread cards. So if a border from this binder was used on 1921 Holsum Bread cards, why is it impossible that a border from the same binder was used on legitimate 1921 Herpolsheimer's cards? No one is saying that this proves the Herpolsheimer's are real. But the binder also does not prove they are fake. It just proves that the border existed before the 1970's. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
"In other words, you are admitting that you cannot explain why a border from the 1930's can appear on a 1921 Holsum (actually the Herpolsheimer is fake) Bread card." Not in other words. Those are the perfect words. Yes, I'm stealing a Hollywood punchline. A border from the 1930's can appear on a 1921 Holsum Bread (actually the Herpolsheimer is fake) card when it is actually not from 1921, but a much later date and to go even further when the printer found the back design for his print. Thank you. Out of all of the over 300 posts in this thread, yours was the best setup line of any. Updated at 6:07 p.m. and altered from Michael's original post. Thank you so much. Waving you the best :D |
Quote:
|
Oops. My cold. So, sorry. Graduated from waive to wave to misreading with a cataract in my left eye. So sorry. Holsum good. Herpolsheimer fraud.
Still, waving you a good day. :D Look forward to reading from you. :D |
Quote:
|
1 Attachment(s)
For, oh, about the fourth time I have covered this with you, but it's entertaining. The Holsum has been known before the 1930s. The Herpolsheimer? Fraud after the creation of the back pattern associated with it and please feel free to note I stated previously in a post that the pattern was close, but I was curious about the other pattern noted by number under the first in the book online. That pattern was not shown. Go to post #240 and scroll down.
Waving you on. Best with your follow up. Notice how i haven't contradicted myself outside of one cold/cataract moment that just passed. Another wave. |
Heads up. Going out shopping. So, if it's a slow response.
|
No, no more follow-ups. We are going round in circles, so I hereby waive my right to continue to participate in this thread.
|
Quote:
Dipping out of the discussion (again) |
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:10 PM. |