How Fake Autographs Are Made
Traced forgery
A real signature projected or carbon-traced, then inked. Tracing produces the classic tells: slow, even strokes where a real hand moves fast and light.
Autopen
A machine replays a recorded signature path — every copy identical. Two “autographs” that overlay perfectly didn’t come from a human hand twice.
Printed signatures
Inkjet or screen-printed sigs on otherwise real cards. Magnification exposes dot patterns and the absence of ink sitting on top of the surface.
The practiced freehand
The hardest class: forgers who’ve rehearsed a player’s signature hundreds of times. This is where exemplar comparison and professional authentication earn their keep.
The 7 Tells of a Forged Signature
- Drawn, not flowed — shaky micro-corrections, uniform speed, heavy consistent pressure.
- Pen lifts in the wrong places — forgers pause to check reference; real signers don’t.
- No ink topology — real ink sits on the surface with edges and pooling; printed sigs are flat and dotted under a loupe.
- Era mismatch — players’ signatures evolve; a modern-style sig on a rookie-year item is a timeline problem.
- Perfect placement — dead-centered, perfectly sized autos on every card in a lot is a production line, not a signing.
- Identical twins — find another copy of “the same” auto online and overlay them; identical = autopen.
- Provenance vacuum — no signing story, no witness, no photo, just a bare COA (see below).
Authentication That Stays Attached
This is the live verification page a protected, authenticated card carries — the record travels with the card.
On-Card vs Sticker vs Aftermarket
| Type | What it is | Trust level |
|---|---|---|
| On-card (pack-issued) | Signed directly on the card via the manufacturer | Strongest — built-in provenance + premium |
| Sticker auto (pack-issued) | Signed label applied by the manufacturer | Legitimate; modest discount to on-card |
| Aftermarket signed | Signed at shows, in person, or… elsewhere | Only as strong as its authentication |
Aftermarket is where nearly all forgery lives. It’s also where real, wonderful signatures live — the difference is documentation and recognized third-party authentication.
The COA Myth
A Certificate of Authenticity is a piece of paper. Anyone can print one — forgers include them because they work on buyers. A COA has exactly the credibility of its issuer: recognized authentication services stake reputations on their opinions; “lifetime COA included” from an unknown seller stakes nothing. When evaluating a signed card, evaluate the authenticator, not the certificate.
Protecting Authenticated Autos
Authentication answers “is the signature real?” once — the problem is keeping that answer attached to the card through every future sale. LEGITLY solves the attachment: a tamper-evident sticker with a single-use code links the physical card to its verification page — the signing documentation, the authentication, the photos — permanently and scannably. Future buyers don’t inherit your paperwork; they inherit a scratch-and-scan proof.
Autograph FAQ
How can I tell if an autograph is fake?
Exemplar comparison, loupe for print dots, watch for drawn-not-flowed strokes and odd pen lifts, distrust perfect placement, and demand real provenance.
Does a COA prove authenticity?
No — a COA is only as credible as its issuer. Unknown-issuer certificates are decoration.
Are sticker autos fake?
Pack-issued sticker autos are fully legitimate — just typically valued below on-card signatures.
How do I keep authentication attached to the card?
LEGITLY verification — the single-use code ties the card to its authentication record for every future owner.
Signed. Authenticated. Provable.
LEGITLY keeps your autograph’s authentication attached to the card — for this sale and every one after.
Protect Signed Cards →