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REA Gary Cooper
What is enough proof to take down a questionable piece.
Gary Cooper’s daughter, Maria Cooper-Janis, responded to our inquiry and said, “I, of course, have seen that photograph in our family archives, (and) have several shots of Gary Cooper and Babe Ruth at some moment, but none of them are autographed and the picture you refer to was never in our possession.” Would you buy that piece now? |
Well-done
It's a shame given how many characteristics of a genuine Ruth-signed piece it possesses, especially the straight-edge-like writing, which was a trademark of Ruth's more 'carefully-signed' pieces :roll eyes: |
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If you want to discuss, just give me a call. |
JimStinson
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_______________________ jim@stinsonsports.com |
I do not know which is more inaccurate:
the authenticity of the autograph or the manner in which this was reported to all of us. "probe nabs" - it makes it sound criminal. The spirit, and accuracy, of this reporting is far worse than the subject it tackles. I was really put off by this write-up. and if this autograph would have fooled many, or all of us - and fooled PSA - and fooled JSA, then why in the world, would you write "probe nabs" with regard to the auctioneer. The positives of someone bringing inaccuracies to light - must be weighed against the negatives in the manner in which they do it. On the whole, this report creates more inaccuracies than it resolves. |
JimStinson
Autograph authentication for DUMMIES ! Look at the autograph LAST do your research FIRST
_____________________ jim@stinsonsports.com |
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That reminds me of the Ruth autograph, from a board member touting his authenticator's superior ability, on a 1953 Silver Certificate. And I am not commenting on the Cooper item, I know nothing about it. . |
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Dude... I just made that up... it was not intended to be a dig at all...had to post it. haha:) I was going to call you anyway to discuss a couple photos. |
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What you probably don't know is that I've discussed this piece with others, over the phone, so I'm rolling my eyes based on several characteristics of the piece that we've discussed, plus at the fact that it's even up for auction. |
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I believe you pointed out the straight edge line originally... and there were examples shown of authentic examples of straigh edge looking sigs. Idk.. I could be wrong.. my memory is not as good as it once was. And.. it really doesn't matter at this point anyway. The stupid Forger should have totally mixed it up a bit and made the signature uneven.. then it would have passed everyone's "sniff test". Stupid forger.... haha:) |
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_______________________ jim@stinsonsports.com |
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JimStinson
I am OTTA here ...forgive me BUT color me GONE.....Bye , Hasta Manana or whatever the F anyone says I'm...............................LONG GONE ...ADIOS AMIGOS
____________________ jim@stinsonsports.com |
JimStinson
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What in the world is going on?
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I can tell you it has nothing to do what you said.:) I think that they feel once you get rid of the people that are smarter than them they win. I am only talking about a couple of people and Travis it is not you. |
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I think a lot of what Ben wrote was meant with sarcasm... |
James, if was, it still doesn't change my mind. What I wrote is what I feel. It just gave me a chance to say it.
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("common" Any authentic item the supposed signor could have signed, showing a period-appropriate inscription and/or signature.) |
I'm not following why the daughter's comment is proof of anything - I'm not a celebrity, but I own quite a few personalized autographs from celebrities, and my daughter wouldn't have any clue about what I have or have owned. Is Cooper's daughter saying the family kept some kind of itemized inventory of his memorabilia? If so, for how long?
The daughter was only 5 years old when the Ruth photo was allegedly signed, and she was only in her early twenties when Cooper died. Is she saying she's been in charge of the estate since then (1961), and the photo was never recorded in a formal inventory done for the estate? |
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Also, if anyone presented an example that had several straight lines and this many words, they deleted it - I doubt any such exemplar exists. |
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Ben, you've confused the hell out of me three times in one thread. Where did this statement come from? All I can make of this is that you think the writing on this photo was by Ruth, and that there is some sort of conspiracy to discredit the authenticator. Quite frankly, without going back and looking, I couldn't tell you if it was JSA, PSA or both who authenticated it. So whatever group you have me 'strongly aligned' with in your head - please remove me. |
What really is happening is that this site is loosing a lot of people that really know what they are doing . Instead we are reading opinions from people that have little or no knowledge. I can not blame Jim from walking away. He does not need this crap. I do blame the people that have never helped but just attack, attack and attack.
If ther is anyone that thinks that Cooper piece is authentic please say why. No pictures no BS just tell anyone on here why it is a authentic. |
Shelly, Jim stated that there are forgers who can create Ruth autographs that are perfect. As David pointed out, if Jim is correct, then without provenance, what do you do? I can't blame either David or Ben for responding the way they did.
I also felt that it was a curious statement for Jim to make, but he's perhaps the most knowledgeable person participating in the autograph forum, and I certainly wouldn't want to be responsible for running him off. Besides, Ben and David already responded. I am always tempted to 'run' from this forum and not look back, but all in all it is a lot of free entertainment - besides, it's the best way to learn about Ruth and Gehrig autographs. If you were starting at square one, you certainly couldn't learn anything by gathering a bunch of PSA and JSA examples and studying them. |
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the man then walks to a church a few miles down the road and goes inside and sees a skull again. he asks the caretaker about it and this guy too says that it is john the baptists skull. the man says "but i was just at the previous church and they said their skull was john the baptists skull also! What gives?" the caretaker then said "well, their skull is john the baptists skull as an adult, we have his skull as a young boy." it parallels the tpa's seemingly refusal to do even the lightest work to check out some of these artifacts or in this case autographs. |
I have an autograph of Willie Heston on ebay (and another in my personal collection). I was contacted by his grand daughter who told me it was fake because Willie REFUSED to sign anything "Willie" because she told me he HATED that name because he was teased about it since it can be another name for a Penis (true story). I respectfully told he in a nice way that I knew more about her Grand Fathers autographs than she did having collected early Football autographs and owning or handling at least 20 Hestons in the last 10 years and she was like 8-10 years old when he died. She refused to believe me and said she was going to contact authorities and all that. SO, I dug into my files and asked some friends for help and provided 5 different examples of handwritten letters completely in his hand in which he signed his name "Willie". Having completely proven her wrong, she just disappeared, never even bothered to apologize for questioning my ethics.
Moral of the story (and I have at least 5 -10 other similar stories over the years) FAMILY USUALLY DOES NOT KNOW WHAT THEY ARE TALKING ABOUT, especially when you are talking about children or grand-children. I would absolutely trust a spouse's word on something (my wife knows me better than I know myself) but be careful taking the word of "family" as gospel in the collecting world. Rhys |
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Leon stick with the card side.:eek: |
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Oh Leon, by the way would you do this in your auction.The bidder is off the hook but this what took place unless the high bidder renegs.
The current high-bidder on the item at $8,000, however, reached out to Haulsofshame.com after recently learning about an article published on this site in 2010. Said collector, Ralph Gary Brauner, “After bidding $8,000 on the above item in the ongoing REA 2013 auction, I found an article saying it is a fraud. It has 3 COA’s. They will not remove my bid. Can you help me?” One of the coa's came from Gutierrrez while with Mastro, second coa Psa 2007 and finally back to Mastro in 2010 authenticated by Spence seems Mastro had a big interest in this piece. |
This is crazy.
Note to auction houses: DO NOT check provenance on items like this. What if the family told you it is a forgery? Then you would be forced to state in your description that the family says it's impossible that Ruth could have signed this, but sometimes family members have bad memories, so they could be wrong. Holy cow. |
Actually, we already know this piece is good and that the family members are either lying or have bad memories - the TPA's SAID it is good.
Good thing PSA isn't authenticating the family's line of descent. All they have to do is issue a certificate stating that the children actually have different parents, and that's that. Now I get the 'DNA' part. ...or is it 'Do Not Argue' ? :confused: |
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I don't know what the "family archives" of the Cooper family look like, or how they are catalogued, but it strikes me they are probably a bit more organized than the typical photo album and firebox full of important papers that most families keep. Even if not, as Jim said originally, "Certainly this photo would have been one of her most PRIZED rememberences of her father." Moreover, this doesn't seem like something that Cooper would have given away before his passing, given that it was personalized, and that he kept other, unsigned photos. Bottom line is, you can poke at the reliability of provenance and question relatives' memories all you want, but I don't think this is as easy to dismiss. Cooper's daughter doesn't have anything to gain either way, and her remembering whether or not her daddy had a photo signed by arguably the most famous baseball player in history is a different thing altogether than her looking at a Gary Cooper signature and opining whether her daddy signed it or not. The latter requires training and experience. The former requires an average ability to remember very basic details. Just my 2 cents on it :D |
no opinion on the sig, but i have to agree with rhys. going by family member's account or memory can be an iffy proposition. unless she was the curator or cataloger for her dad's collection, her account is just one piece to the puzzle and not the be all end all to the discussion.
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Think about it - this should make you kind of sick: A good forger is sitting in a coffee shop, creating a signed item. When he's done, he can send it to a TPA and probably have a good chance of getting it authenticated. Then he sells it to someone who is unscrupulous, but who has a good imagination and no integrity. Now all he needs is an auction house that relies on the expertise of the said TPA (and certainly could not care less what people on an internet forum have to say), and two bidders who want the said autograph, and who put all of their faith in TPAs as well. Job done. Could I get a refill please? ...and could I borrow a pen? cha-ching (edited to remove 'Ruth' references, as you can't get the required pen at a coffee shop) |
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Was she the curator for Cooper's collection? Does she have intimate knowledge of the "things" he left behind when he passed? Or was she just speaking offhandedly about some photos she vaguely recalled of her dad in a baseball uniform? Based on Shelly's quote, I would tend to believe she is more the former than the latter, but either way, I think it bears further exploration rather than immediate dismissal. Edited to add: There you go. Thanks Shelly for clearing up what kind of authority she is on the subject. That's what I get for taking longer than 6 minutes to type a post :) |
SERIOUS QUESTION:
Does anyone know if any of the TPA's have annual reports that they release? Data detailing Total # of rejects, verse accepts? |
obviously some opinions from family members are more weighted than others due to their level of involvement. i'm not dismissing the testimonial at all, and shelly has done some research into the daughter so we can put hers higher up. however if you ask my wife, or most members' wives here...i don't think they can differentiate whether i own a jeter or a pujols, much less a cobb or a wagner.
and the forgers in their basements perfecting their craft on ruths and gehrigs, it won't be for the "cooper ruth" where the lineage can possibly be traced back. it will be some bland 3x5 or scuffled reach ball, so at the end of the day it'll be whether the sig is good or not...and as often the time comes like the ruth 700th hr ticket you'll have some experts believe it's good while others don't. |
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