doug - evergreen park wrote:
I haven't done it but from what I have researched you can do just what you described. And of course, only do it for items that project at a high value.
Are we talking cards or signed memorabilia?
I have the following items I am considering bringing:
2 team signed baseballs with Ted Williams signatures on them ( I need to try to figure out what years based on teammates on the balls )
A Chicago Bulls baseball cap that has a Michael Jordan autograph covering the bill in Sharpie.
Signed picture of Muhammad Ali standing over the Beatles
A padded Cubs metal foldout chair with Ernie Banks signature on the back pad
I have a bunch of other signed items but nothing that I think is actually worth much of anything. I know the Ted Williams balls have some value but
I need to have them authenticated. My grandfather picked them up at a garage sale decades ago and I am not sure the people selling them knew
what they had but I am pretty sure my grandfather did. The Jordan signature I got from my ex-mother in law for Xmas 20 years ago and she got it
from a memorabilia shop. Bought the Ali picture online in the late 90s and I am skeptical of its authenticity. Great picture either way. I doubt I would
spend the money to check on the Banks chair. I have "certificates of authenticity" on everything but the baseballs but those are worth less than the
paper they are printed on. At least with a PSA thing I would have solid proof. I think it is at least $100 to get each item authenticated so that is part
of my dilemma.