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#1
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Thanks for the response. You may be correct that jerseys are like fingerprints in that they are unique assuming they are manufactured in ordinary due course. By that I mean that when a jersey is manufactured, the manufacturer is not trying to mimic any prior manufactured jersey. But that is not what a forger does. That person does try to exactly replicate a previously made jersey.
Take fingerprints. Yes, everybody's real fingerprints are unique. But suppose I wanted to frame somebody for a crime, and I knew the fingerprints of the person I wanted to frame. Suppose too I had the ability to create finger coverings I could put on that would generate identical fingerprints to this person. In such instance the fingerprints I would leave at the scene by having worn these finger coverings would appear to be those of this other person. That is how a forger operates with respect to jerseys. He uses known images of the player wearing the jersey to create a replica so precise that one cannot discern the difference with the unaided eye. So with your Jeter jersey, I am not saying it is not genuine. I would regard photo-matching as step one. If the jerseys did not match, you could stop there and know you had a fake. That is why I use the phrase "negative testing" to describe photo-matching. But having passed step one IMO more is still needed to establish its genuineness. |
#2
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wow never knew so much was involved and never realized (or took for granted) the length forgers would go to make it match as much as those details they try to do
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Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1920s Advertising Card Babe Ruth/Carl Mays All Stars Throwing Pose 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards Rare early Joe Jackson Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
#3
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Jeff,
The ability to sell a fake for millions of dollars gives skilled forgers all the incentive they need. |
#4
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If you're talking about taking a common game used jersey and turning it into a HOF worn, a forger would have to take a jersey completely apart to make seams match, remove all set strips, numbers, lettering, embroidered player names, etc. It would be extremely difficult to do without leaving evidence like extra needle holes, differing colors on jersey, different threads and stitches, etc.
To me, its possible but there would always be some evidence there if you look hard enough. I definitely agree with your point about negative test. I've seen way too many people call a loose thread a photo match. People look for 1 similarity rather than looking for a difference. |
#5
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![]() Quote:
And how many times have we heard used the phrase "evidence of game use? How hard is it once the replica is made to have someone wear it for a while until it shows the appearance of having been used? Last edited by benjulmag; 06-08-2022 at 07:56 AM. |
#6
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I mean, in theory, someone could create more Dead Sea Scrolls, or original print of The Declaration of Independence. How about just making a 52 Mantle that passes muster? I once had (my only GU uni ever) a Dykstra Phillies home uni that was matched definitively to a game by the staining, so it can be a positive ID also.
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"If you ever discover the sneakers for far more shoes in your everyday individual, and also have a wool, will not disregard the going connected with sneakers by Isabel Marant a person." =AcellaGet |
#7
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In regard to your Dykstra uniform, the matching of the stain is not a positive ID. It is no different than matching pinstripes. Again, I'm not saying the uniform is not authentic. But other than the photo-matching, do you have other corroboration that the uniform is real and was game used? |
#8
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Fading is also an indicator, especially on grey (road) jerseys. Looking at the back of a shirt, there will not be any fading behind the numbers on back, but should be some fading everywhere else. That indicates the numbers have been on the shirt a long time while the shirt was in use in sunlight. Different teams used different types of stitching. For example, 1960's Dodgers used a straight line stitch. Other teams used a shark tooth stitch, some wider, narrower, or tighter. Often, patches were stitched differently than the team logo or numbers. If you look at the analysis a top-line jersey authenticator does, like Dave Grob, you'll be amazed how many specific details he examines against known, catalogued exemplars. Then there is the light table evaluation to see if there are any stitch patterns that might indicate, for example, a number change. There is the black light examination, to determine whether a name in collar tag, or sleeve patch, has been there all these many years, or was recently attached. Could it be done? Sure. Art forgers have been copying the masters for centuries. Successfully forge a Rembrandt and you've made multiple millions. But unless the jersey was worth huge dollars, the attempt would not likely be worth it, and even then, I'd bet on the skilled authenticator to be able to raise red flags if a supposed vintage jersey wasn't authentic. |
#9
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My expertise is not in game-used jerseys but in other areas of memorabilia. And I have been beat. To this day I marvel at the skill and knowledge required to make the replicas and wonder who had the skill/knowledge to do it. BTW, doesn't it strike one as strange that the vintage jerseys that show up just happen to be of HOFers? And how many confirmed exemplars are there of such jerseys? My bottom line -- photo-matching in and of itself is not enough to conclude a multi-million dollar HOF game-used jersey is genuine. Last edited by benjulmag; 06-08-2022 at 04:26 PM. |
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