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#1
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
I am still stunned after seeing some of the prices of Old Judge material last night in Lew Lipset's auction. Clearly, lots of people have lots more money than I do to throw at these things and there are far more collectors interested in 19th century material than there used to be. |
#2
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Posted By: scgaynor
Read the description for the Flynn and I think that it will explain everything. Especially the part about later prints selling for less than originals. |
#3
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
So your're saying that the ones in AM predate the ones in REA? Doesn't the description in REA state just the opposite? |
#4
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Posted By: Glenn
They're waiting in the weeds. REA will do just fine in the end. |
#5
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Posted By: scgaynor
No, I am saying that they probably all came out at the same time. I believe that Rob's description hits the nail on the head. |
#6
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Posted By: Jay Miller
The ones in the AM auction were the same, from the same period, as the REA ones. Obviously the fact that they were probably not from the 1880's didn't dampen the spirits of the AM bidders. |
#7
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Posted By: scgaynor
It probably would have made a difference if the AM bidders knew that they were not from the 1880s. |
#8
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Posted By: davidcycleback
The photos were made in the 20th century. |
#9
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Posted By: Jay Miller
David--Do you think SCD will update their take on these proofs? I noticed in SCD that AM has some more proofs, including a Gypsy Queen and Mayo proof, in their summer auction. These proofs look the same as the Old Judge proofs. I wonder how they will be portrayed, if at all, in SCD. |
#10
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Posted By: Peter
Hello to you all! |
#11
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Peter--Do you know anything about how the person you got the proofs from acquired them? Was he related to someone who worked for Goodwin & Co, the maker of Old Judge Cigarettes? Did he give you any feeling for when the proofs were from? |
#12
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Jay, if you're concerned about whether or not they will be 'cataloged,' I have an online guide to early baseball photographs and plan on including a brief description of these photos. My guide is not a price guide, but the REA prices likely will mentioned as a reference or standard for readers. I have no opinion as to what the prices will be or should be, and am waiting just like everyone else. |
#13
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Posted By: Jay Miller
David--No, that wasn't my concern. Bob Lemke's article which was published about the time of the AM auction hypothesized that these proofs were period. Many SCD readers do no access this chat board and are thus left with the impression that that information is still correct. I was wondering if Bob was going to update them with the latest thinking. Perhaps Bob still holds the belief that these proofs are period and does not think that there is any reason to provide any additional information. I'm sure that we would all welcome hearing from Bob on this. |
#14
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Posted By: Peter
Hello Jay, |
#15
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Posted By: Julie
prints are albumen or silver geletin. That being said, I have seen none of them in person, and and probably couldn't afford them at the 20th century price, let alone the 19th century price. |
#16
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Posted By: Jay Miller
If the source of these proofs was a photographer for Goodwin & Co then maybe we should rethink the time that these photos came from. |
#17
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Posted By: Peter
Hello Again, |
#18
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Peter--Can you post a picture of that envelope? That sounds like some hard evidence that these proofs may in fact be period. David--how can this be? |
#19
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Posted By: Peter
I will try to get it scaned over the weekend. I also had the photographers salesman sample mounted portfolio. It had all the different size photos including all the tobacco brands in the images like the one the REA has up for auction. Bat's Tobacco, Lucky Curve, Home Run,Ph Mayo and Gypsy Queen. They were the cabinet size and the tobacco card size. It would of been a presentation piece used by the photographer. Rob can tell you all about the piece that was part of the 30 plus images he stated were period. Email me and I will give you my phone number here in Vermont. |
#20
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Just spent about a half hour on the phone talking to Peter and I must say that he makes a compelling arguement that the proofs are period. Although some of the proofs may have been attached to the cardboard some time after the 1880s (they were sitting unbacked in files and were becoming damaged)the actual proofs he contends are period. The source--the relatives of a photographer for Goodwin--can't get much better than that. He also notes that proofs of Matthews are very rare. He promised to post some more information of the board so I anxiously await what he has. |
#21
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Posted By: davidcycleback
My opinion is that the debate about the age of these large framed display photographs should exclude the consignors. Though that would make this a very short thread. |
#22
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Posted By: barrysloate
There are amateur photographers today who have studied and learned the process of making modern daguerreotypes, using the same techniques that were used in the 1840's and 1850's. I've seen some of them and they are quite well done. That said, why couldn't someone take a glass plate negative and learn to produce a photograph that would be virtually identical to and nearly indistinguishable from one made in the 1880's? It's not that these proofs can't be period, they very well may be. But you would be amazed what people can do with a little practice and a bit of technology. If the glass plate negatives stayed in the family all those years, it's not unreasonable to think they were used at a somewhat later date to produce additional images. |
#23
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Posted By: Peter
Hello Jay, |
#24
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Posted By: Peter
This is a picture of the from envelope that came with several Goodwin & Co Images back in 1997-98 I sold it with a grouping of the proofs. |
#25
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Posted By: barrysloate
That envelope is a pretty neat keepsake- doesn't definitively prove anything, but does bolster the argument that the proofs were made while the guy's great-grandfather worked there. Very interesting. |
#26
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Posted By: Peter
Some have speculated the they could have been printed later as some sort of a scheme to make alot of $$$$$. You must remember these were purchased from the family on many different times for a fraction of what others eventually paid for them. They went through several hands and across the country and everyone made a profit. The first groups of proofs were purchased for less than $50 a piece! and the negatives for purchased for almost nothing. |
#27
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Posted By: barry sloate
Shame on the family for giving away these heirlooms for next to nothing. A little bit of extra work on their part could have gone a long way. |
#28
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Posted By: scgaynor
I have not heard anybody comment that they are modern prints, but it seems that the only people who think that they are from the 1880s are people who have a financial interest in them being from the 1880s. |
#29
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Posted By: barrysloate
Scott- That's interesting. Didn't printers always make proofs? There are T206 and T3 proofs for example from 1910. They didn't exist 20 years earlier? Or are you saying the term did not exist? |
#30
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Posted By: scgaynor
Just the term "proof". I have never seen anything from the 19th century, sports or nonsports, marked in that way. |
#31
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Posted By: barrysloate
If that's true, then that's compelling evidence that the envelope was marked well after 1888. Worthy of further research. |
#32
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Posted By: scgaynor
Barry, the flip side is that I may be totally wrong. I am just relating my experience, ask around and let me know what you find out. |
#33
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Posted By: Jay Miller
According to the Encyclopedia Brittanica the term proof was used in relation to printing dating back to the 15th century. Although it obviously did not relate to photography back then it is not hard to imagine it being used in the late-1800s. |
#34
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Posted By: Peter
This Alfred E Moore Aeronaut June 87 photograph was in another group of proofs that I had some time ago. I tried a digital camera to make a copy but it doesn't work as well, I should have the others scanned by Wednesday when I return from a business trip. This photo is in a private collection here in Vermont. It was the same type as the old Judge proofs. |
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