|
Post by ROCKY on Aug 6, 2015 1:17:06 GMT
|
|
|
Post by pothos on Aug 6, 2015 11:13:16 GMT
Rocky I watch some of these documentaries about authenticating items and there was a show recently where three L.S. Lowry paintings were proved to be real. They did this not only through chemical analysis but a airtight paper trail of who owned the pictures and the dealers who sold them. One even showed up in a 60 year old BBC newsreel taken of Lowry's studio.
I doubt without hard rock solid evidence anybody would want it. Surly guitar buyers need as much provenance as possible before handing over any cash.
|
|
Glass Onion
I'll Be On My Way
Arriving somewhere, but not here
Posts: 376
|
Post by Glass Onion on Aug 6, 2015 11:35:48 GMT
Rocky I watch some of these documentaries about authenticating items and there was a show recently where three L.S. Lowry paintings were proved to be real. They did this not only through chemical analysis but a airtight paper trail of who owned the pictures and the dealers who sold them. One even showed up in a 60 year old BBC newsreel taken of Lowry's studio. I doubt without hard rock solid evidence anybody would want it. Surly guitar buyers need as much provenance as possible before handing over any cash. People do the strangest of things pothos, I watched that Homes under the Hammer and a guy bought a flat at auction without reading the auctioneers info, and there was only 57 years left on the lease.
|
|
|
Post by ROCKY on Aug 6, 2015 12:44:56 GMT
I like the one comment on the Lennon guitar that the person who owned it was in jail at one time. How the person knew that I don't know. But it did get a chuckle out of me.
|
|