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-   -   Restoration debate (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=82963)

Archive 11-19-2006 02:37 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>ScottIngold</b><p>I know we've gone through this a million + time's. But what do you think about the Plank in the current Maestro auction.<br /><br />It is listed as restored. But they play up how the restoration is done with period paper fibers and how difficult it would be to detect.<br /><br />Does someone spend there $'s and send it out for grading ?<br /><br />From the write up it sounds like it would get through one of the big three. If not all of them.<br /><br />Is it time to just accept that pro restorations are here to stay on high $ cards ?<br /><br />I would be really curious to see what happens to this card after the sale.

Archive 11-19-2006 04:04 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>Dylan</b><p>It looks really good... Its stated that it was in VG condition prior to the restoration. Im curious to see what it sells for. I would find it hard to believe someone alter a VG, thats a pretty valuable card to mess with!

Archive 11-19-2006 04:19 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>The card has a beautiful appearance but I doubt it will pass any of the grading standards; even "authentic" might not apply here. The owner was free to restore it and the auction house is properly describing it. The fear is that one day it may end up in the wrong hands and be passed off as high grade. But even that is doubtful. In this case if I were the buyer I would want to see a picture of it before the work was done.

Archive 11-19-2006 04:57 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>dennis</b><p>if I were the buyer I would want to see a picture of it before the work was done." great point barry!<br />i find it hard to believe it was in vg prior to restoration. maybe the vg is fritsch standard (with paper loss & tear/missing piece, run over by a truck)<br />i actually would prefer a vg than a restored nm. as i am sure most here would also.

Archive 11-19-2006 05:28 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>T E</b><p>Just curious. If I send in a Home Run Baker T206, I would imagine it wouldn't raise any eyebrows at the grading company, I imagine they would just send it off to whoever they use to grade T206s. But wouldn't a card as rare as a Plank set off all kinds of alarms, and force the particular company to make sure they got it right? I don't really understand how this grading stuff works other than I send it off with a payment and they send back my cards in a slab.

Archive 11-19-2006 05:55 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>Sean Coe</b><p>Restoring a VG card of this value makes no sense since there was an intention to sell. Perhaps what was left of the card was in VG condition, but I have to believe that it was in such terrible condtion overall, that it at best would have received an Authentic grade.

Archive 11-19-2006 06:05 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>barrysloate</b><p>Sean and Dennis are correct. Nobody would mess with a bona fide VG. A professionally graded VG is worth more than a card restored to look NR MT. It had to have significant flaws for it to have been restored.

Archive 11-19-2006 08:39 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>Frank Evanov</b><p>I doubt this card would ever be graded by one of the Big 3. Unfortunately, it will likely be sold [without the disclosure] for big bucks at some future date to an unsuspecting buyer.<br><br>Frank

Archive 11-19-2006 09:58 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>ScottIngold</b><p>Would someone spend 10k + and not try for the holder ?

Archive 11-19-2006 10:20 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>Frank Wakefield</b><p>I'm half of that someone. I'd not spend 10k for restoration. But I wouldn't spend a penny on having a card graded that I was going to keep. So if one day I were to take a notion to have serious restoration done, then yes, I'd do that and not grade it... wouldn't even let them grade it for free. Wouldn't let them pay for the privilidge of grading it.<br /><br />And I feel the same way about the horses the graders rode in on, too.

Archive 11-19-2006 10:33 AM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>Paul</b><p>The description on Mastro's website says that blue ink was added to the background -- presumably where the original ink had been scuffed or chipped away. I think that explains why the owner might have wanted to restore the card. Of course, it doesn't seem real consistent with a pre-restoration grade of VG.

Archive 11-19-2006 01:24 PM

Restoration debate
 
Posted By: <b>davidcycleback</b><p>The key word relatied to restoration is and always will be 'disclosure.' Mastro<br />has disclosed the restoration, which is what they should do. If a buyer<br />gets the card slabbed other than AUTH and tries to resell it without disclosing the <br />restoration, most judges would classify that as fraud. If restoration and<br />lack of disclosure becomes widespread in the hobby, that only means there is<br />widespread fraud-- not that lack of disclosure has become acceptable.<br /><br />99 percent of the time, the mere act of attempting to get a known altered card <br />graded as unaltered ('seeing if the grader notices') can be classified as the<br />start of fraud. There are collectors who honestly just want a never-for-resale<br />novelty grade or who are sincerely testing the graders for an Old Cardboard <br />article, but these fall within the 1 percent.


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