Doug, that is way cool. I have some things made by my grandfather. Not signed. So they most likely will end up in a garage sale some day. I urge folks to also add the year the piece was made. Gallery folks sometimes say it makes the work look like something is wrong with it if last years or several years ago date is on it. Baloney. It just takes the right person. I have been a full time turner since 89. One year I listened to a gallery owner and stopped dating. That was 1990 so if a person has my work undated I tell them. Bonnie Klein set me straight. I am the artist. A cronological point of reference is important. Collectors like to collect a persons work as they change. Dating is the only way. If your great grandfather had just signed the work you would have thought cool. But the year makes it killer. And adds an aspect of historical note. Linda and I have gotten a few turnings from the secondary market. A 1963 Bob Stocksdale offering plate among them. We know that because of the detail Bob took on the bottom of the plate. If it were unsigned it would have been just another wood item. But signed, dated and who it was given to really adds. Oh, and sign your name where it can be read. Not your check signiture.