At the risk of restating the obvious, I do not remove the badges to look at the back of the "scull."
I did this as a teen ager, but as an adult, I realize that it was a destructive habit.
At the risk of restating the obvious, I do not remove the badges to look at the back of the "scull."
I did this as a teen ager, but as an adult, I realize that it was a destructive habit.
a close up...
What flaw? I don't see anything!
I will beat a dead horse, and do so with glee. I cannot see these details with the naked eye. Basta.
While some of you gain your SS regalia from moors and dark forests, others of us are used to finding insignia on caps and tunics.
The difference is cultural and one of the age of the person. This fact leads to a different perspective.
None of you can convince me that those purported differences in these badges are much other than coincidence and historical oddity rather than some
significant feature worthy of much attention or energy, to say nothing of the more or less dubious attempt to assign a monetary value to such things.
If you take offense at this statement, then that is the world in 2015.
Happy collecting, and do buy these things from a sound source.
PS Messr Bernhard's badge is very nice. As I say, I collect these already on the cap, and, in the ideal sense, where the thing has been since about 1934 or 1935, if luck allows it.
eight in one place? That's pretty good. Well done.
Here are sixteen plus badges in one place, but I found them by a different method.
It would be interesting to know how all the badges got into one spot?
I guess the persons de SS'd their uniforms, or discarded spare insignia or whatever.
Did you find other archaeology things there to add to the story?
As I say, I live far from the battle fields and have collected from the trophies of US occupation and NATO stationed troops.
Hello Friends,
For the sake of education, could someone describe or point out the "characteristic defect", in question?
Thank you
Mart
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