
Quote:
Originally Posted by jerseygary
I was reading the fake Rube Marquard thread and I got to thinking about Sharpies. It looks like the fake signature was done in a Sharpie-like marker. Maybe it was in a kid's marker, but let's say it is actually real and indeed done with a Sharpie.
Rube passed away in 1980 and Sharpies were first marketed around 1964, so one could have been used in that 16 year window.
My question is: what is the earliest Sharpie autograph anyone has seen?
When I was a kid in the late 70's and early 80's, Sharpies were a work item, for instance my father was in the garment industry and used them to mark patterns. He used to give worn out ones to me and I would take them to school where they were a novelty because they weren't something that was mainstream at the time. Or they were used to mark clothing and were commonly kept in a kitchen "junk drawer" or toolbox. I seem to recall that collectors started getting Sharpie autographs later than that, like the late 1980's?
Anyway, whenever a Sharpie signature turns up on a suspect item, the date 1964 is thrown out as if people used them as early as that to get autographs. What's your oldest Sharpie signature?
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I would also think that the fine point sharpies would be preferable for autographs whether authentic or forged. I believe the fine point sharpies are considerably “younger” than the original sharpies. Does anyone know when the fine point sharpies were introduced?
Try signing a T206 with a standard Sharpie.  
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Last edited by frankbmd; 11-27-2018 at 09:49 AM.
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