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#151
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Posted By: PASJD
Perhaps Andy who seems to have a good relationship would care to relay these as well as MW's: Why to date have you not disclosed to the public your relationship with the "outside conservator" and why does your catalog not include, for each item the conservator "cleaned" or "stabilized," a description of precisely what services were rendered and the extent of them? Has this merely been an oversight? Will you make full disclosure in the future? Are there any other items in the current auction on which similar services were performed? The issue here is not simply what Doug/Mastro consider acceptable (see Doug's email reprinted by Andy) the issue is DISCLOSURE. As any lawyer will tell you, it is deceitful to sell an item while concealing a known, MATERIAL fact. Materiality in legal terms means something a reasonable buyer would consider important to the total mix of available information. In my judgment, what was done to the Keeler was "material" and intuition tells me the same is true with respect to other items. I, and I would guess others, would be quite interested in the response. |
#152
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
I certainly agree with you, counselor. |
#153
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I fully understand that for many collectors that it is hard to believe, but some collectors actually prefer a card which is not in pristine condition. I am one who has this preference. The rational which I am comfortable with includes the following observations relative to a worn card: |
#154
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Me too, Gilbert. |
#155
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Posted By: PASJD
Well not to open a new can of worms, but certainly rumors abound that the PSA 8 Gretzky-McCall Wagner was trimmed. From what I am told it is "common knowledge" in some circles but of course I have no way of knowing. Hey Hal, I confess, that PSA 7 CJ Wagner I sold you was "cleaned," "stabilized," bleached with a q-tip, and other things too evil to mention. I'll take it back though just to show what a good guy I am. |
#156
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Posted By: PASJD
Have similar services been performed on cards that now reside in "slabs" from any of the three major grading companies? And if so, were they informed prior to submission? I don't know PSA's official posture on such things, but something tells me that if that Keeler had been a Cracker Jack Joe Jackson and PSA knew that its appearance had been altered that much, they wouldn't have slabbed it. Just a guess. Well I won't hold my breath expecting truthful answers, but it would be nice to get them. |
#157
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Posted By: Peter Thomas
This is all very interesting, but has anyone noticed that this item is beautiful? If everyone wishes to retract their bids I would be delighted to own this beauty for the opening bid. |
#158
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
.......said the blind man as he kissed his pig. |
#159
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Compared to some hobbies baseball card collecting is in its infancy, while compared to others it is quite sophisticated. I would much rather have our hobby emulate that of philately or numismatics than, for example, comic book collecting. |
#160
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Posted By: PASJD
Gilbert's post demonstrates precisely why DISCLOSURE is so important. We all have different preferences, there are no generally accepted industry standards but rather a whole bunch of gray areas as to which reasonable minds can and do differ, so any seller not out to deceive should disclose the FACTS so each buyer can decide for him or herself whether and how much to bid/pay for an item. A seller who makes a partial disclosure only when pushed to the wall by incontrovertible evidence of before and after photos has not, thus far, impressed me. |
#161
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Posted By: DD
I have to disagree with Gilbert about the comic book part of his statement. There are many collectors who enjoy collecting, and actually reading their comics, and give little regard to condition above a certain level. |
#162
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Upon re-reading my previous post, I can understand why anyone would think that I feel comic book collecting is a hobby of less stature than other collectibles. I certainly do not feel this way at all. |
#163
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Posted By: warshawlaw
is why anyone would want a comic book in a slab. How can you read it? |
#164
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Posted By: Scott
Scott, I'm sorry but if I had to believe one or the other, Doug wins hands-down. The reasons are simple - you have admitted that you can't remember much of what is said to you, or that you say - a real good reason for others to be skeptical of your claims. Your posts are usually rambling and undecipherable, so I normally don't respond to them, even if I have a good guess as to the point you are trying to make. I made an exception this time because of your ridiculous comparison of this situation to your buddy's, and then your follow-up foggy accusations against Mastro. This is a thread you should have sat out. |
#165
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Posted By: Scott
...prior to my exit (from this thread only |
#166
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Posted By: DD
I agree about the slabbing of comics. It is done for profit and investment, and also to protect them from the elements. My other point, and I wish someone would respond about it, is how can CGC spot restoration, and card graders either cannot, or will not? |
#167
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Posted By: jay behrens
SGC is part of the parent company that owns CGC also. I never understood why they could slab cards and label them the same way they do comics. Green labels for unaltered cards, red (or some other color) for altered cards, with notes as to the alterations. Given the small size of card slabs, they could simpley have a numerical code and youc ould check these codes on their website. |
#168
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Posted By: PASJD
I may be wrong about comics but I think the difference may be that comic book restoration is not done with the intent of deceiving anyone, whereas (at least some) baseball card restoration is done with that intent and some practitioners are good enough to escape detection. I recall the chilling words from the article about "Daniel Paul" in 1996, wherein he stated (in substance) that really good restoration could not be detected. And one can only presume the art form has improved in the past 8 years. |
#169
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Posted By: jay behrens
comic restoration is done to decieve too. It's jsut harder to pass them off now since resotred copies are slabbed and anyone spending money on highgrade examples isn't going to leave the huge sums of money behind that grading a nice clean raw example would bring. Raw, high grade examples are very suspect. |
#170
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Posted By: Julie
biggest sports auction house in the country routinely asks |
#171
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Posted By: MW
Has anyone received any correspondence from Doug Allen/Mastro concerning the questions posed by Hal, PASJD or me? |
#172
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Posted By: hankron
When I was moving once, I dropped some stuff off at my parent's including a 1800s Sweet Caporal die-cut cardboard sign of a soldier with a small die cut tassle on the of his helmet. When I went to my parents to pick stuff up, my mom said that she had dropped the sign and the tassle broke off, but, not to worry, she had glued it back on with elmer's glue. She did a good job too, and most collectors would never notice. |
#173
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Posted By: hankron
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#174
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Posted By: hankron
I once gave my mom a 1800s William Hogarth (British artist/painter) engraving about the size of a Harper's woodcut. A few days later I was visiting her and saw that she had the print sitting on a table next a much narrower frame. |
#175
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Posted By: Joe P.
Julie: |
#176
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Well, I can tell from your next to last post that YOU are a liar (since you did post again - within seconds, after stating you would NOT)! Also, I have come to the conclusion that the SEVERAL people who have e-mailed me telling me what an idiot you are surely KNOW what they are talking about! |
#177
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Posted By: al davis
actually, the intelligence quota scale rates a moron as between 50-69, an imbecile between 30-49, and an idiot below 29. i hope this has been helpful. |
#178
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Posted By: Richard Masson
It is typical of comics to be "cleaned and pressed" and this is not generally regarded as being restored. Restoration is when colors are touched up, pieces are added, tears are repaired, new staples used, etc. It is accepted practice because it is important for the comic to survive and not deteriorate further. Restoration can usually be easily identified using a black light and a magnifying glass. The high grade unrestored books are few for most of the key books and all the dealers know which copies are which and who owns them. In fact they are called by name; e.g.,"Mile High", "San Francisco", "Lawson", "Chicago","D collection", depending on their provenance. |
#179
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Posted By: Judge Dred
Final hammer - $5032 (including juice). |
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