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Help With Babe Ruth Cut
Hi all!
I have a Babe Ruth autograph that has been passed down to me. Story goes my great grandfather got this autograph in person. Someone, I believe my father, framed the cut autograph with other autographs that family members obtained. As you can see in the picture, the Ruth autograph has slowly ripped and is now in two pieces. I was trying to research the best way to preserve this from future damage and was suggested to post on this board to ask for your help. While I’m not interested in selling this, I do want to try and keep it in some form to pass down. I wasn’t sure if I could simply tape it back together or is there a different method? https://i.ibb.co/py9ZvMR/32-B2-E889-...AC65-A7440.jpg |
I would NOT "tape together". From my research into paper conservation for an item I have, minimum charges are in the $350-450 range and charges go up depending on complexity.
Good news is that most will give you a written estimate detailing proposed actions free of charge, although turnaround may be many weeks. I have not made a decision on who to work with as yet, so no recommendations on who to use. |
tape the backside of it together so the tape can't be seen on the display side. Or you could remove the pieces and have them adhered to something like an index card and they would stay in place.
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The adhesive from regular tape will damage it as it leaches through the paper. Document repair tape, which is similar to tissue paper and archivally safe is used in these situations. I have been doing it for years for ripped documents and photographs. Done properly it is barely detectable. I would probably reach out to someone and get a quote. Do a search for archival or paper restoration in your area. We have several in the Northern Virginia area. If you wish to try it yourself it can be purchased at these places: https://www.universityproducts.com/ https://www.archivalmethods.com/ http://www.lightimpressionsdirect.com/ If I did it for this I would put the repair tape on the back and burnish it. A burnishing tool is a small plastic tool that allows you to smooth out the tape and flatten the tear so it adheres properly |
Nothing to add on the repair but would add what a great auto. Ruth had a pretty amazing signature.
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Ain't the net an amazing place? Be careful out there, boys and girls. |
Elmer's Glue works too.
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https://www.archivalmethods.com/product/glue-dots |
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Thank you all so much your responses! I reached out to a paper restoration company in my area to see their quote.
Out of curiosity, would an autograph expert be willing to offer their opinion if this Ruth is authentic? While it’s a cool family story, I have no way to verify if it’s true or if we’ve been passing down something not authentic. If it’s not likely to be authentic, not sure it’s worth going with a company to repair it verse trying to do it myself. Ha. |
Yes, it's worth having a professional do it.
While the right archival materials are available, they aren't cheap, and you only need a very small amount of each. So doing it right will be expensive. You can also run into problems that are daily things for a pro, but a huge puzzle for the rest of us. For instance, I think it's likely the tear was caused by the adhesive used in framing expanding and putting pressure on an already weak crease. So the first problem is what exactly is that adhesive and how do you remove it without doing more damage to the paper or autograph. After that, you need to know how to neutralize whatever you did to get the adhesive off. After that it gets easy, a good archival paste, and mulberry paper. I do my own preservation work, but my stuff is cheap enough that the right materials cost more than the items, so I use "next best" type stuff. I would not work on this if it were mine, I'd send it to a pro. |
Worth sending to a pro for sure. I’m no expert but looks real and you have a story behind it to support that conclusion
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From that small blurry pic, it looks good. But would be nice to see it blown up. The R in Ruth looks funny though. Almost like it was traced over. But almost certainly good. One can even (roughly) date this autograph to about 1934ish to 1944ish. Does that fit the timeframe that your grandfather acquired it?
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So it was most certainly traced over at some point. Which sucks. Probably nothing sinister either. Signature was probably fading and someone (in an attempt to preserve it) traced it over to make it darker. That really stinks.
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Agree.... it appears traced over.
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I do wonder this - could it just be slabbed without tinkering with glue or tape? Especially if not going to be sold. (I know....I have watched National Treasure too many times :-)
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Aesthetically, it wouldn't look very nice inside the slab with most of it being separated. Plus, the flip will likely say "traced signature" or something to that extent. So if it were mine, I would professionally restore it, put it in a mylar sleeve, and mat/frame it with a great photo of the Babe. |
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I still don’t have it in my hands but the paper restoration company told me the Ruth was done and sent back the attached. They even encapsulated it for me. I triple checked and they said it’s not laminated. Lol.
https://i.ibb.co/tBWPvmq/4-DC1-BBF9-...32-DAF55-F.jpg |
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The Alfred E. Smith signature above it is not that valuable but still a decent signature.
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