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#1
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Posted By: Rob
In another thread it was mentioned something to the effect that in the 1950s there were some Wagner Piedmonts reprinted that were so good that they'd be mistaken for the real thing if it weren't for disclosure that they were reprints. |
#2
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Posted By: leon
I think the grading companies, especially SGC, can catch pretty close to 100% of reprints. Recently I had the great fortune of seeing the Charles Bray- Piedmont Wagner in an SGC Authentic holder, debunking the rumor it is a fake card....at least in my mind. I doubt Dave Forman would want to buy back a 100k-200k card so my guess is that his guys were pretty careful....regards |
#3
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Posted By: Rob
well, i'm sure for a $100k+ card, they will spend the extra time (hours?) to ENSURE the card is not a reprint, but what about a VG/EX t206 common? |
#4
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Posted By: Richard Dwyer
I'm sure David Cycleback will chime in, but T206 cards were printed completed different than any of the modern T206 reprints. Under high magnification, instead of seeing dots you'll see irregular splotches. Today's cards show a pattern of dots. 1880's cards show brush strokes. T206 cards show irregular splotches. |
#5
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I don't think reprints could be made today or in the 1950s that could fool an expert looking using his naked eyes, and I'm including many of the avid T206 collectors on this board. Further, original T206s were made with an antique printing process and ink that can be identified with the microscope and couldn't be duplicated on a good reprint. |
#6
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
I hear what you're saying and I don't claim to have nearly the expertise you have to say you're wrong. However, conceptually, I don't understand why if somebody somehow had access to the original plates he could not by using the same inks and paper used in 1909 create undetectable duplicates, right down to the microscopic dot matrix pattern. As I see it, this is not like duplicating a Van Gogh where identity of painting style would be a prerequisite. Just like no two people sign their name exactly the same way, so too that no two artisits have identical painting styles. In the case of manufacturing a baseball card, though, what more to it is there than paper, ink and plates? So if someone in 1909 put in storage the plates, inks and paper to make T206's, and then removed them in, say, 1953, why couldn't he make undetectable reprints? And, if he did not save the inks and paper but someone had records of how they were manufactured and used the same manufacturing methods and ingredients to create the same inks and paper in 1953, why would the card look any different than how it looked if all this had been done in 1909? What am I missing in my analysis? |
#7
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Posted By: E, Daniel
If you keep inks 50 years they age and change in how they display. |
#8
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
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#9
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Posted By: Corey R. shanus
Thanks for the response. What you say makes a lot of sense. Certainly I can understand how inks and paper chemically can change over the years, and as a practical matter be unusable many years later if the sole purpose is to create undetectable reprints. And I also hear your point that modern manufacturing methods would result in papers and inks different enough from those made years ago through cruder manufacturing processes, once again preventing the reprints from being undetectable. The only caution I have to all this is that given the extraordinary economic incentive to create the perfect Wagner reprint (right down to the microscopic dot matrix pattern), I wonder if somehow somebody could recreate the primitive manufacturing processes necessary to create ink and paper identical in all detectable aspects to those used in 1909. I'm not saying it would be easy, nor even possible, only that with a successful outcome you've just created a multi-million dollar card. Certainly gives counterfeiters a lot of incentive to try. |
#10
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Posted By: JimB
I suppose there would be some incentive to try, but it seems like an aweful lot of effort and money to put into something that probably will not pan out. I would think there are easier scams to pull off for those so-inclined. It certainly would not have been financially viable in the '50's for somebody doing it without the intention of making large sums of money off of fakes. |
#11
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Based on what I've just learned in this thread, I agree that the notion of 1950's reprints passing muster is as a practical matter not possible. Not that I ever had reason to believe the PSA 8 Wagner is not a period card, only that now I understand why for all practical intents it cannot be a reprint. Going forward, however, and forget about the PSA 8 Wagner, as I said at the end of my last post, given the incredible economic incentive to somehow make the perfect undetectable reprint, I not only do not discount the possibility that someday it will be done, but feel that in the future should any PSA 8/SGC 88 Wagner surface, without provenance I'm not sure I'd be willing to bet the millions of dollars it would take to buy the card that it was real. |
#12
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Posted By: E, Daniel
Absolutely true Corey, enormous incentives. |
#13
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Posted By: joe brennan
Absolutely true Corey, enormous incentives. |
#14
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Posted By: davidcycleback
A question is why would anyone in 1953 recreate the original T206 ink and paper? What was a Wagner worth back then? I can see someone reprinting baseball cards in 1953. However, at a time when a T206 Eddie Plank was worth $3 and Allen & Ginter Cap Anson 30 cents, setting up a chemistry lab to recreate 1909 paper and ink seems far fetched. That is unless he was also working on a time machine to get 2007 prices (Be wary of the man at the National Convention who dresses as if he's from 1953 and uses phrases like 'Territory of Hawaii,''Vice President Nixon' and has a companion named Romana). |
#15
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Posted By: joe brennan
The Wagner was worth $50 and the Plank $25. Forget the money, even thought $50 was a months salary in 1950. Comes out to what? About $5000.00 in todays dollars? What if you didn't own one? What if there was no e-bay, no cell phones, communication by letter. Hmmmmmmm, chances are you may never own one. But my buddy does and all my buddies work or have ties with major card publishers. Let create some cards for fun, like a sheet of T206's with a Wagner and a Plank with a Piedmont back so now one will ever confuse it with a real one. How about some wrong # Goudeys? How bout a #116 since everyone has that spot open because of that Lajoie fiasco. How about some Goudey's with differnt color backs so know one will ever confuse them with real ones. |
#16
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Posted By: E, Daniel
Two things about the Calendar Ruth card. |
#17
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Posted By: E, Daniel
But Joe, 50 years later? |
#18
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Posted By: JimB
"But my buddy does and all my buddies work or have ties with major card publishers. Let create some cards for fun, like a sheet of T206's with a Wagner and a Plank with a Piedmont back so now one will ever confuse it with a real one. " |
#19
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Too many attacks. Regarding David Rudd's statement above about people not knowing what to look for in a real T206 regarding these 1950's reprints - is that a blanket statement David? If so, you would be referring to Mr. Heitman not knowing what to look for in a real T206. Again, I doubt anyone in the Hobby has handled more raw T206's and done as much research as Mr. Heitman has done. Again, I have seen two of these 1950's reprints. One was on ebay in the early days - the seller was honest and selling it as such - the bidding still went into the high four figures back then. I remember when the bidding was over $7k, I really took a close look at the enlarged scans and said to myself "with knowledgeable people bidding on this card, and it looking so real, I believe this seller might have a real Wagner and doesn't really know what he owns". Well, after exchanging e-mails with the seller, I realized he was knowledgeable and knew exactly what he had - as he acquired it in the 1950's as such and told me the story about these 1950's reprints with different - Piedmont backs (as late as Lipset's Encyclopedia, the Wagner was only known with a SC 150 back). Also, in 1987, I was at a card shope in Gatlinburg, TN and the owner had a display with one of these 50's reprints and a real SC 150 Wagner. I was speaking with him about the difference and he said over 90% of the people who tried to guess which was real or fake were wrong. He then showed me the backs - one was a Piedmont and one a SC 150 and told me that real Wagners would only have a SC 150 back, as that was the only cigarettes the cards were issued in. |
#20
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Posted By: E, Daniel
Read again what David has written. |
#21
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Most forgers pick an audience. Most forgeries aren't intended to fool Rob Lifson and most forgers don't try and sell to Rob Lifson. The forgeries are intended to fool people unfamiliar with the cards, including people who may not actively collect. The maker of those AAA slabbed picture cut outs probably knows that someone who owns a Standard Catalog and reads this board knows they're not cards, but that's not his targeted audience. |
#22
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Posted By: joe brennan
Don't take me as a zealot on this issue,( just take me out to the ball game) but when the senario arises you have take a look at the history of the card. Didn't show up until the 80's. The most world known baseball card in pristine condition remains hidden for 80 years. Ok, I'll buy that. The most printed back in the history of baseball cards and there are only 2 known examples? Paper drives got the rest huh? But 60 or so SC's made. Now I know all of you that have calculated the odds of how many T206's were original printed with every back and how the % of how many survived would have to say that this number, 2, is unbelievablly low to say the least. Wouldn't the estimate be near 90 or 120? |
#23
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
However, let me clarify a few things. First of all, when a Wagner is sold, have you ever seen another by its side for comparison? Especially a Piedmont Wagner? |
#24
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Posted By: joe
These posts are very interesting, but when did this urban legend start? I have never even heard this story in the 35 or more years I have been in the hobby. I know Bill Mastro, have met Rob Lifson years ago. I also knew Frank Nagy and I don't remember him mentioning these reprints either. I am not an expert on the T206 cards, but this could not have been hidden all those years, could it? |
#25
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Posted By: joe brennan
Geez Scott, I thought I just said all that 30 minutes ago? LOL |
#26
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
You guys are talking as if these people in the 1950's were printing Wagners and other cards to make money - THEY WERE NOT! They would print some cards that were unattanable to fill holes in their collections and their friends collections. These people were NOT trying to deceive anyone or make a fortune (If you look at any price guide in this period, baseball cards were not worth a fortune and collecting was really looked upon as a kid's activity). At least these people "fooling around" with the printing presses were honest and put different backs on cards they did print. I am certain if these people were dishonest, cards were worth a fortune in the 1950's, and these people had these presses at their disposal, they would have printed Wagners with Sweet Caporal backs (that is IF all of this were true and they were trying to deceive someone for financial gain). |
#27
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Evidently, you have to repeat things on here for some to comprehend what you are saying. BTW - this has been known for years - just go back several weeks and look at Bill Heitman's post about these reprints. He did not go into detail about them, and I don't blame him - he would be here explaining himself over and over like Joe and I are doing! |
#28
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Corey (and Scott and Joe, for that matter), please don't take my flippant earlier comment as disrespect toward any of you. In fact, Scott and I had a brief debate about this very issue on another board this week, and it was a pleasure to debate so civilly. So I didn't mean to sound disrespectful. |
#29
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
What you're saying is that 1950's reprints made with original plates but using either (i) 1950's ink and paper or (ii) ink and paper chemically consistant with that used in 1909 but manufactured in the 1950's would result in a card undetectable to the NAKED EYE to T206 experts compared to an original made in 1909. |
#30
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I know you and I have had our debate and we have to agree to disagree - which is fine. |
#31
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Also, I have never looked at any Wagner under a microscope or a loupe (I doubt many here have). I saw one of these 1950's Wagners in person at a card shop in Gatlinburg, TN in 1987 and another around a dozen years ago from an eBay seller with large scans. The only thing I can tell you is the one in Gatlinburg looked identical to the real Wagner it was setting beside of (but, both were in a glass case and in the thick screwdowns of the time). Also, the one on eBay looked real (by the scans of course). In fact, both of them look identical to the Piedmont Wagners I have seen that are claimed to be real. Also, it is widely known that Bill Mastro wanted the PSA 8 Wagner graded quickly and put in a slab! If I sold someone a legitimate card that was not trimmed nor questionable in any other way, I would not care if they slabbed the card or not! |
#32
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Posted By: joe brennan
But Al, Isn't it fun to debate something actually related to basball cards on this board? And when I say debate I mean civilly with no name calling and pouting? It's great we all have an opinion. |
#33
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I believe I posted one pic of it here and one on the other forum. It was auctioned in an old REA auction and is DEFINITELY hand cut. In fact, it is badly cut! I believe it to be the one that came from the same sheet as the Wagner that is now in a PSA 8 holder, as it is the only Piedmont Plank I can find a picture of anywhere. However, the picture is not that great unfortunately - I cannot remember without hunting it again, but I even think the catalog picture was black and white of the front and back of the Plank. |
#34
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Posted By: E, Daniel
Al, you beat me to the punch. Of course I had to kick start my brain cells to work fast enough to understand what Scott has so generously tried to explain to the simpletons like myself on this board..... |
#35
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Posted By: joe brennan
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#36
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
You are knowledgeable and have a great eye to spot these fakes or questionable cards. Simply do what I do. I still even bid in Mastro auctions and win items from them (even though I shouldn't until they clean up their act and might change my mind about that one). I do however pass on a LOT of items in Mastro auctions and some other auctions - especially the ones that you can tell are setting there in a high grade holder and my daughter could spot that it is trimmed! I have simply become more focused in my collecting and collecting what I really love - even multiples of cards I really like. Maybe, if more and more people let these auction companies know that we are NOT going to let them get by with altering cards before having them graded and other things they are doing, we can band together and attempt to clean this mess up! |
#37
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Joe, when I start feeling that way, I always do the same thing: |
#38
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
You can even ask Al about that one, as he and I definitely don't see eye to eye on this. You have been mad at me ever since I would not sell you a Red Hindu Tannehill for a loss and put it on eBay and proved you wrong about what you swore it was ONLY worth! All I do is keep coming on here to explain to people like yourself who try and take what I say out of context. Don't worry - I won't do it again, as this is my last post here on the subject. Like Al and I agreed - we will simply have to agree to disagree on this one and it truly is something that we will probably never know 100% of the truth about unfortunately, so there is no point in typing over and over to try to explain ourselves. |
#39
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
That is the last Piedmont Wagner sold by Mastro. Now, can anyone look at that scan and really say with a straight face it looks real!? If Joe Blow listed that on eBay instead of Mastro, there would be a 500 post thread here on it being a fake! Also, this is the one that Doug Allen sent me the "provenance proving" letter to my e-mail address regarding. Yep - the provenance according to the letter from Doug (which I believe was also posted in the Mastro catalog as well - cannot remember), proved this card's provenance ALL the way back to the 1950's! |
#40
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Posted By: leon
Since it resides in an SGC Authentic holder, and with the exact provenance it does and DOESN'T have, I am going to go out on a limb and say it's real...just keeping it civil.... |
#41
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Posted By: joe brennan
If that card isn't hand cut, I'll give away all my vintage. |
#42
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Posted By: leon
It is absolutely hand cut and Authentic....From the little I have seen and heard (and to a lesser extent "know") I would theorize that the Piedmont Wagners are period and came on sheets.....and were never inserted in packages...each one I have seen has been hand cut....regards |
#43
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Posted By: peter ullman
yup...looks real-ly hand cut! |
#44
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Posted By: joe brennan
Leon, If that's the case how can the Card reside in a PSA 8 case? |
#45
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Posted By: leon
That's a rhetorical question right? |
#46
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I believe the Piedmont Wagners were printed on sheets later, a lot of people, including Leon believes they are period and hancut. We are all entitled to our views and I don't disprespect anyone for theirs (and don't appreciate anyone disrespecting me for mine). I still say that if that exact card had been put on eBay by someone other than Mastro, a lot of the people who believe Piedmont Wagners are period would have questioned that card right away! |
#47
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
Notice how on the PSA 8 Wagner that the little lines bunched together around "Base Ball Series 150 Subjects" and "The Cigarette of Quality" seem to run together??????? Doesn't this happen when you "copy" or "reprint" an image? In an original, the lines are distinct and seperate - though, they are very close together. On the PSA 8 Wagner, the lines are "blurred together". I KNOW this happens when something is copied, as I had to copy thousands of documents when I was in the insurance business and smaller details like these lines bunched together didn't come out as plain as on the original!!!!!! BTW - this is not just a freak coincidence on the PSA 8 Wagner's back - I have looked through several Piedmont backs and none of the originals have these little lines "blurred together" like this Wagner does! |
#48
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I thought for certain someone would have posted a response trying to debunk what I said. Guess that is hard to do when you have the two above back scans - the Wagner clearly narrow and the fine lines bunching together just like a copy along with a real Piedmont back that is full size and the fine lines clearly seperate!?!? Still waiting on someone to call me an idiot or tell me I am wrong (even though a picture is worth a thousand words)............................................ .................................................. ............ |
#49
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Posted By: joe brennan
Joe May 30 2007, 11:24 PM |
#50
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
Scott, |
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