Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr. Zipper
In my opinion, it's dangerously naive to think forgers -- at least the good ones -- aren't always looking to perfect their craft.
There is plenty of anecdotal evidence to show otherwise. After the Charlton Heston secretarial study was released on Autograph News Live, guess what? The forgers stopped copying the secretarial style and started copying the authentic style. Did that just happen by coincidence?
On CollectSpace a few posters spilled the beans on subtle traits they look for in Neil Armstrong autographs. Guess what? Within months we started seeing fakes with those same traits that never appeared before.
The forger who did all the Burczyk Mantle forgeries has altered his Mantle in the past few months. Did he do that for no reason or maybe because he was reading some "feedback" on his style here or elsewhere?
More than once Travis has espoused an attitude that forgers operate in an isolated silo scribbling lousy fakes that are all easily detected. This is simply not true.
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Well written, Mr. Zipper and right on the money.
It was about a month ago when we noticed the source of the Burczyk certed Mantle forgeries changed his
Mantle forgeries. The irony being, they are more horrific than the original Mantle forgeries he produced.
The change happened due to sites like Net54 and AML.