Thanks for responding Helmut
I think buyers would like to know how much of a margin of linen has been left 
around the poster before purchasing and the best way to do that is to show an 
image of the entire poster including the linen border. Maybe there is a reason 
why the crop the images but I cant understand why they do it.

I quite understand your comments about buying linen backed posters on eBay. 
There have been some horror stories about misrepresented linen backed posters 
but in recent years eBay has been encouraging sellers to add multiple photos to 
their listings which include the back of the poster and closeups of the edges, 
etc. Not everyone does this but it is a good way of showing any defects.

Regards

John


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: 31 October, 2024 5:42 PM
To: Moviemem Original Movie Posters <[email protected]>; 
[email protected]
Subject: Aw: Re: [MOPO] Linen backed posters at Auction houses

John,

don't ask me why they are doing this, but this is one reason I hardly ever buy 
linenbacked posters online. I NEVER buy any linenbacked posters on ebay 
anymore. The few occasions I did, more often than not, what I received was 
nothing short of HORRYFING.

These days, the dedicated auction houses usually list any serious defects. 
Fortunately, the days when both Christies and Sothebys would list anymore that 
'looks ok if you don't look too close' as Condition A- are over.
Most auction houses offer a detailed description these days, but mistakes 
happen. Ages ago, I bought a poster from Heritage that was described as VF+ and 
'best copy we've ever seen' or something. When the poster arrived, it had the 
entire white borders airbrushed. I'm sure there was no bad intention, somebody 
simply made a mistake. This was for a client, and he was happy, so I let it 
slide.

Re. Linen border: As long as there is still a linen margin left, say a quarter 
inch or so, I don't see that it makes a difference. That said, I do not like it 
either when there's no linen border left and I agree, it lowers the value.

Foxing on the linen border certainly is a defect and should be noted. I 
recently bought a linenbacked poster from a private seller that has a lot of 
foxing on the backside only. The front is perfectly fine. In my book, this does 
not lower the value of the poster, but when I put it on the website I will of 
course mention this in my description and also publish a photo of the backside.

Helmut

www.filmposter.net<http://www.filmposter.net>

Gesendet: Donnerstag, 31. Oktober 2024 um 03:28 Uhr
Von: "Moviemem Original Movie Posters" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
An: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Betreff: Re: [MOPO] Linen backed posters at Auction houses
Hi Alan
My preference has always been to have at least one inch of linen as a border. 
The linen often frays on the edges over time and that is not good if the linen 
has been trimmed to the border of the poster. The majority of linen backers 
will routinely leave a margin unless the customer specifically asks for it to 
be trimmed to the border so I think that speaks volumes.

Regards

John


From: Alan Heimann <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: 31 October, 2024 11:48 AM
To: Moviemem Original Movie Posters 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Linen backed posters at Auction houses

Just curious John..why do you think if the linen is trimmed to the poster 
border it’s worth less?..Alan

On Wed, Oct 30, 2024 at 6:40 PM Moviemem Original Movie Posters 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi to you all
I recently purchased a linen backed daybill from one of the big auction houses 
(doesn’t matter who it is). It was described as very fine on linen but the 
photo had been cropped to only show the actual poster and not the linen. When 
it arrived it was pretty badly frayed on the edges and the linen border had 
some foxing spots / stains and pinholes in the linen.

I think collectors need to know whether there are any issues with the linen and 
how much of the linen has been left around the poster. I’m sure you have all 
seen where some linen backed posters have been trimmed to the edge of the 
poster and this detracts from the value as far as I am concerned.

I looked through the auction history and was surprised to see hundreds of linen 
backed posters that have been sold where the photos have been cropped so that 
you cant see the linen borders. That makes it guesswork for the buyer.

Just curious as to what you all think about this. Should auction houses show 
the entire poster including the linen borders? Why would they crop the images 
so that you cant see the linen borders?

Regards

John



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