Originally posted by Iconoclast
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Last edited by Observer; 08-01-2020, 02:02 PM.
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Originally posted by Observer View Post
Really, it's like beating yer bonce against the wall. It's pointless. A potential buyer wouldn't give a hoot if the inside back cover of a gold watch they were purchasing had a few "hardly visible" scratch marks in evidence. It doesn't detract from the watches aesthetic appearance
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Originally posted by Observer View Post
Then Stewart was telling lies and did not attempt our polish out the engravings
So logically why would an expert go to such trouble when the watch has remained in the family?
Maybe the watch was just polished as the jewelller described and has actually is nothing to do with the theory of Turgoose. Just handier if you can link them I guess.
Again no expert has supported this old etching tool nonsense that supposedly could provide the aged brass particle in the base of the etches with no trace of other particles down the sides of the etches - just the base.
Then there is Maybrick’s signature. The loop on the K is pretty darn close to the one on his marriage register. A forger pre internet with expert watch engraving knowledge with expensive equipment seeks out a copy of the marriage license to just let the Johnsons keep the watch?
Still, let that none of that stand in the way of the narrative you wish to portray.
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Let's cut out the Billy Bollocks, Observer.
In your (frequently all-too ill-thought-out) opinion, how did the signature in the watch get to be such a good analogue for Maybrick's true signature on his marriage certificate?
Answer this one, and we can start to really engage in the realities of the watch.
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Originally posted by Observer View Post
Yeah right, you're full to the brim with Nurse Yappy's liquid cudgel, any more administered for the DT's would finish you off
Assuming you can, of course ...
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostLet's cut out the Billy Bollocks, Observer.
In your (frequently all-too ill-thought-out) opinion, how did the signature in the watch get to be such a good analogue for Maybrick's true signature on his marriage certificate?
Answer this one, and we can start to really engage in the realities of the watch.Last edited by Observer; 08-01-2020, 02:20 PM.
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Aunty so and so. Piffle. Used by both my family and my partner's to refer to a close female relative or friend. Even more common in the older generations when people looked after each other unconditionally.
Much less of a problem than the handwriting or breast placement.
And no, I'm not a diary supporter. Just a supporter of good sense and provable facts.
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