Fake photos continued...
Good discussion. Here is what I know. I have also heard the "original negatives on period paper story". It may be the case for a small(very small) number of them, but not the majority. First, I have seen these photos on both artificially aged paper(to make them look like they were 60 years old), and on new bright white paper stock. So whoever is making them is intentionally aging them so they can sell them as originals. Second, I have actually met one of the gents that "modeled" in a session that I mentioned. I keep track of the fake photos I see, and recognized him. This was 6 years ago at a major show. He was German and confirmed that he was indeed in the photos I mentioned. That is why I state without doubt that there have been recent modeling sessions to create some of these photos. I have no idea which ones are "Szabo" remakes(and he has been busy, because I've seen guys with hundreds of them. He must sell them in bulk, not just out of a single suitcase! Third, just the content of the photos makes it impossible, if you have seen enough. As I mentioned earlier I have seen the same guy as a Kriegsmarine officer, with Sub-badge and DK in gold. Another photo he is a Wehrmacht RK winner. No way that happened. Even if he had changed branches(which did of course happen) he would have been the RK and DK in at least one of the photos.
Whichever way you look at it, the photos are fake. If they were original negatives, recently remade, thats fine. I have thousands of German negatives, and frequently have some printed. But I never artificially age them to try to make a quick buck!
They are fakes and being created with the intention of defrauding collectors. Nothing more and nothing less. If this Szabo guy simply wanted to provide good photos for the collecting world, why put them on 60 year old paper? <I>But if dealers are getting their hands on these photo's (remember they are printed on original old photo-paper) the prices will go up fast. So don't blame the supplier but the dealer !!</I> That just kills me. So I guess we also shouldn't blame the guys out there making fake Knights Crosses? Afterall, he is simply providing the collecting world a low cost alternative to a multi thousand dollar award. Its those dirty cheating dealers that are actually breaking the law!
Good discussion. Here is what I know. I have also heard the "original negatives on period paper story". It may be the case for a small(very small) number of them, but not the majority. First, I have seen these photos on both artificially aged paper(to make them look like they were 60 years old), and on new bright white paper stock. So whoever is making them is intentionally aging them so they can sell them as originals. Second, I have actually met one of the gents that "modeled" in a session that I mentioned. I keep track of the fake photos I see, and recognized him. This was 6 years ago at a major show. He was German and confirmed that he was indeed in the photos I mentioned. That is why I state without doubt that there have been recent modeling sessions to create some of these photos. I have no idea which ones are "Szabo" remakes(and he has been busy, because I've seen guys with hundreds of them. He must sell them in bulk, not just out of a single suitcase! Third, just the content of the photos makes it impossible, if you have seen enough. As I mentioned earlier I have seen the same guy as a Kriegsmarine officer, with Sub-badge and DK in gold. Another photo he is a Wehrmacht RK winner. No way that happened. Even if he had changed branches(which did of course happen) he would have been the RK and DK in at least one of the photos.
Whichever way you look at it, the photos are fake. If they were original negatives, recently remade, thats fine. I have thousands of German negatives, and frequently have some printed. But I never artificially age them to try to make a quick buck!
They are fakes and being created with the intention of defrauding collectors. Nothing more and nothing less. If this Szabo guy simply wanted to provide good photos for the collecting world, why put them on 60 year old paper? <I>But if dealers are getting their hands on these photo's (remember they are printed on original old photo-paper) the prices will go up fast. So don't blame the supplier but the dealer !!</I> That just kills me. So I guess we also shouldn't blame the guys out there making fake Knights Crosses? Afterall, he is simply providing the collecting world a low cost alternative to a multi thousand dollar award. Its those dirty cheating dealers that are actually breaking the law!
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