January 20, 2026 4 min read
If you’ve ever sent items to a big signing and wondered how everything stays organized—this episode is for you.
Today I’m covering three things collectors can control that make a massive difference in results:
How you label your items
When inscriptions are worth it (and when they aren’t)
How bad autographs can sometimes be fixed
And then I’m ending on a positive note with the best autograph signer in the industry, in my experience.
Fun website issue: our site only lets us list 50 signings per sport per page, and football finally maxed out. So we had to create a second football page just to keep listings going.
This is the kind of behind-the-scenes stuff you don’t think about until your website looks at you and says, “Nope, I’m done.”
If we’re doing one athlete—say, a single Larry Bird signing—logistics are easy.
But big shows can have 50–60 athletes (sometimes more). And depending on popularity, we may have 10 to 50 items per athlete.
That means the #1 job becomes simple:
Don’t miss anything.
Not an item. Not an inscription. Not a pen color.
And that’s where collectors can help.
Here’s the key question to ask yourself:
If someone looks at my item for 1–2 seconds, is the instruction crystal clear?
That’s the standard.
Pen color + type (example: “Blue Sharpie” or “Gold Paint Pen”)
Any authentication request (if applicable)
Your name / order number
Inscription written clearly (if needed)
Don’t write a long paragraph telling the athlete your life story and then sneak the inscription at the bottom.
If your note says:
“Thank you for everything… my dad and I watched you growing up… you’re the greatest… by the way please write ‘To Tom’…”
That inscription can get missed in the chaos.
We’ve started highlighting inscriptions because it makes it instantly obvious:
YES — THIS ITEM HAS AN INSCRIPTION.
If you want perfection, help us make it impossible to miss.
Inscriptions are fun. They’re the whole point of customizing an item beyond “just a signature.”
And some athletes choose no inscriptions, which is totally fine. Honestly, from a logistics standpoint, it makes everything easier and reduces mistakes.
My biggest pet peeve is when athletes:
get paid for inscriptions
agree to do them
and then complain the entire time
If you hate inscriptions… just don’t do inscriptions.
Or charge more so it’s worth it. But don’t spend a minute complaining when you could’ve already finished the inscription in that same time.
Bad autographs happen. Sometimes the pen doesn’t take. Sometimes paint pens spider. Sometimes it smears even if nobody touches it.
Example from today:
A Marcus Allen mini helmet was requested in silver
The silver came out awful—smudgy and messy
So we cleaned it off and re-did it properly
Helmets (paint pen): Goo Gone on a towel can often remove it cleanly
Chrome/Glossy cards: Alcohol wipes / hand sanitizer wipes can often wipe ink off
Cardboard vintage cards: Usually not fixable (once it’s on there, it’s on there)
If the surface is glossy, you have options. If it’s old cardboard, you’re basically at the mercy of the moment.
Modern mini helmets (especially speed-style) have holes everywhere and very little clean space.
Two inscriptions on a mini helmet is already pushing it. Sometimes the best move is:
move inscriptions to the top
keep the side clean
focus on readability over forcing placement
Sometimes we’ll make an executive decision on color/placement if it means the final result looks 10x better.
Let’s end this the right way.
In my experience, the greatest autograph signer—by a mile—is Barry Sanders.
Here’s why:
Never rushes
Writes inscriptions cleanly
Doesn’t complain
Asks questions like:
“Do you want it here?”
“This angle?”
“Would you prefer it over here?”
Treats the item like it matters
Treats the collector like a human being
I’ve never seen Barry give a bad autograph. Ever.
He might spend three minutes doing one helmet with eight inscriptions (which is “slow” compared to other signings), but the final piece looks like a museum display.
That’s why Barry is the GOAT autograph experience.
If you ever get a chance to meet him or add him to your collection—do it.
This episode is really about one thing:
The best autographs happen when the prep is clear and the process is respected.
Use these autograph signing tips to get better results:
Keep labels short and readable
Highlight inscriptions
Give athletes space to sign
Understand what can/can’t be fixed
Choose athletes who care about quality
Visit: powerssportsmemorabilia.com
Follow: @PowersAutographs
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