Originally posted by 12thPanzer
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It is an interesting but fairly expensive process... There are bunch of good labs over in the States that are doing a great job identifying fake pictures, photographs, books, letters etc... you can actually Google them and read more about some of the testing done...
As for the developer stamps... As I said:
"Also, portraits (especially high quality ones and in larger size) as this one - often have a studio mark, which is something that is very hard to replicate and it is often missing on new-age fakes..."
It does not mean that every portrait has one, but majority of studios used them on higher quality portraits - they were embossed, preprinted and most commonly stamped... It is not a rule of thumb, but it is a pretty good indicator of it being period.
As for the photographic paper - similar late WWII paper stock was used until the mid 50s and early 60s for high end portraits (especially at smaller studios). Also, you can still buy it through specialized dealers and collectors...
Anyway, if collectors here like the photo, that is great. It is not one that I would want in my collection.
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