A a longtime antiques collector, in many fields of Early American items, I can say I never buy items that have been "touched up....improved....restored...." except for at a fraction of the cost of an original. That, to me, is the point of collecting - to see what an original looked like, how it was formed, carved, finished, etc.
This is starting to feel like the zany Muscle Car auctions like Mecum, where a body shop takes grandma's white Pontiac Tempest with a straight 6 engine, and convert it to a 400 V8, paint it red, add custom features, and counterfeit the data plate so it all matches. Then some millionaire bids it up to $80,000 with a lot of back slapping by the auctioneers. Sorry, I'm not at all interested in buying art, recreated pieces, nor competing with wealthy collectors with money to burn. Too risky with this stuff.