Post by King Bálor (CM)™ on Dec 22, 2015 20:22:21 GMT -5
When examining an autograph for authenticity....it isnt so much about what it looks like and more about the stroke. Look at the marker is being stroke against legit autos. Many celebrities have different autographs. They will have long autos and short autos. But some of the common letters used should look the same. The best way to verify it is to take the common letters from both yours and a legit one and turn both upside down.
As far as what you have, as I said before, some of these are definitely legit. And some like Vince, Trish and Shane....FAKE AS crap. The Vince one is so bad bc Vince doesnt have curveture in his signature. Every letter, whether long or short, is very straight. I think that Vince was forged using a Vince facsimile signature. Different marketing material, welcome letters, COAs would come with Vince's "signature" many years ago. All those signatures were created using a machine. Even card companies like Topps do that with sporting autographs on trading cards. You just have to look for some of the signs.
No. It just means they met the person and got a picture. Not only that, but even if you look on ebay....people use "picture proof" for multiple items.
When examining an autograph for authenticity....it isnt so much about what it looks like and more about the stroke. Look at the marker is being stroke against legit autos. Many celebrities have different autographs. They will have long autos and short autos. But some of the common letters used should look the same. The best way to verify it is to take the common letters from both yours and a legit one and turn both upside down.
As far as what you have, as I said before, some of these are definitely legit. And some like Vince, Trish and Shane....FAKE AS crap. The Vince one is so bad bc Vince doesnt have curveture in his signature. Every letter, whether long or short, is very straight. I think that Vince was forged using a Vince facsimile signature. Different marketing material, welcome letters, COAs would come with Vince's "signature" many years ago. All those signatures were created using a machine. Even card companies like Topps do that with sporting autographs on trading cards. You just have to look for some of the signs.
We are talking about the same idea. Some card companies use the stickers. Some card companies have the autographs directly on the card. Some are legit hand signed by the athlete. But there are plenty that are created and mass produced by a machine. Its fairly easy to spot a hand signed and a facsimilie. Rub your finger against the autograph and if it feel bumpy near the first letter and the last letter, it was created by a machine. you can also tell if you look at those letters, sometimes you will see spots that look likes the ink was pressed down. Its when the machine touches the card and when it finishes the signature and lifts up.