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#1
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Posted By: 1Jeff
Hello, |
#2
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Posted By: jay behrens
If you want to remove this mark and have no experience doing this this, the best thing to do is practice on some lower grade cards before you try it on a card you value. The eraser to use for this is to go to find an architect's eraser. This is an eraser used by architect for erasing marks on blue prints. It sort of feels like a cross between plastic and rubber. It does not rquire much pressure to remove the pencil mark and will not cause scuffing to the paper surface if used gently. Make sure you get an architect's eraser becuase any other type of eraser is goig to suff and/or tear the paper. |
#3
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Posted By: leon
Welcome to the board. My opinion on pencil marks, and there will be several different ones, is that I have left them. Most of the times they are on the back, in not too conspicuous places, so they don't detract too much. If they are very light you could try one of the "art" erasers that folks have told me about. If the pencil mark made an indention I believe a grading company will ding you for the mark regardless if it is there or not. If you can erase it with no trace of it then you have enhanced the card by 1-2 grades. Good luck on your collecting....and I hope you don't become addicted like some of us |
#4
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Posted By: Jeff
Leon |
#5
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Posted By: leon
I have several cards that have had pencil markings erased, you can not see WITHOUT a magnifying glass- as you said, and were downgraded in grade(s) OR were classifed "MK"....which is a serious detractor in grading....My personal opnion is that an almost undetectable indention should not ding a card too much....but I guess that's not how SGC and PSA see it....so your answer about the magnifying glass is correct....regards all (BTW, I think it was Jay Or Pete that told me about the architect's eraser which I called an "art" eraser) |
#6
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Posted By: Hankron
Even if is not visiable to the naked eye and under magnifying glass, erasure marks and old pencil marks can usually be identified in other ways. This post should not be construed as a value judgement on such alterations-- I'm merely pointing out that the collector shouldn't deceive himself into that they can be completely undetectable. |
#7
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Posted By: Hankron
I am curious as to how the top professional graders approach this issue eye view inviable but infrared apparent pencil marks. It is certainly understandable that they would use advanced techniques to try and identify alterations on T206 Magie's and 'Snodgrass variations (Whether they do or not, is another question). It would seem that the removal of a stray pencil mark or a spec of album residue would, if anything, be an issue of condition grade. It can be reasonably be argued that a pencil mark or a piece of album paper is not a part of the original card, and it's removal itself is not an alteration of the card. On the other hand, it can be reasonably argued that a gum stain on a Topps or Bowman or a greese stain on a Wilson's Weiners card is, for better or for worse, an integral part of the card, just as are print dots or bad registration. |
#8
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
However, I have a 1935 Goudey puzzle card of Ruth., McManus, etc., number 4J (the rare one), in g-vg condition. On the back, someone, pushing down hard on the penci, wrote "1934." I erased it, and cannot see the pencil marks anymore, but the indentation is still there. |
#9
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Posted By: Dan Mathewson
...and ask his opinion. Brian restores paintings and probably knows of an eraser type, or perhaps a solution (I'm just guessing here) that might work. |
#10
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I believe in removal of foreign matter from cards provided it can be done in a manner that does not harm the card either in the short term or over the long haul. There are two types of removal, chemical and mechanical. You are talking about mechanical. I have had good success with an Artgum eraser (this is an eraser used on paper artwork. The rubber crumbles without taking the paper with it, unlike a pencil eraser, which tears off layers of paper to do its work). The architect's eraser mentioned elsewhere is called a vellum eraser. Same principle. I prefer the Artgum for cards. |
#11
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Posted By: ockday
I bought a T205 Moran "stray line " on Ebay recently that had a small amount of pencil writing on the back. |
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