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SS rank pips
Could someone tell me what size SS rank pips were? I am putting together a repro uniform, and today I've received the collar tabs. The pips are significantly smaller than those on my old uniform, which I think are closer to the original. Since I want my uniform to be as authentic-looking as possible, I'd appreciate knowing whether I should order new pips.
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12-23-2009 07:00 PM
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Re: SS rank pips
Thanks, but I would prefer the exact measurements, because pictures can be deceptive. The pips I received are 12 x 12 mm, and the old pips are 15 x 15. Is that an acceptable variation, or were they all strictly the same size?
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Re: SS rank pips
Look in the Assmann catalog and you will see that the old regimes in Germany produced a remarkable variety of little Sternchen for this role. See page pp 127-8 of the Reddick reprint of the Assmann catalog and you will find 17 or so different types of varying sizes and of varying Werkstoffe and finishes.
I own several SS uniforms, and no one set of rank insignia is strictly the same among some 20 different uniforms, almost all of which have these little Sternchen.
I am also certain that some internet potentate will tell you that a regulation size existed, which is possible, but in practice was seldom the case.
Happy regalia and happier regalia with Sternchen.
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Re: SS rank pips
I appreciate your assistance.
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Re: SS rank pips
Thanks. Onward to the truth about Sternchen.
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Re: SS rank pips
The past has many riddles, and try as we might to erect certainty in the midst of chaos, we will fail every time.
This statement rather eloquently verbalizes one of the most catastrophic failures of the collecting mind, a mindset that baffles me because of the futility of this approach. How sad that the majority of the collecting "gurus" and "experts" who abide by the so called "textbook items only" following, have relegated common sense as far away from them as the time period from which these items originated. For a time, I found myself sounding like the proverbial broken record in saying that - Collectors need to have the mindset of the past when evaluating and observing the nuances of the items we collect - but to no avail.
Too many times, flawed logic surrounds the logistical process of how, and why during evaluation. If we could all realize that manufacturers and the people who wore these items could not have cared less if these pieces wouldn't comply to the collectors standards of today, we would be much happier in collecting instead of sitting up nights boggling our minds over non-existent nothingness.
In fact, this diseased mindset has become an epidemic and infected many so badly, that I have actually heard collectors say in response to a period photo that 'can't be'..."It must be Photo Shopped".....why? Because our modern day collecting minds have denied the reality of the past.
[B][COLOR=Black][SIZE=3][FONT=Book Antiqua][I] Steve[/I][/FONT][/SIZE][/COLOR][/B]
[CENTER][I][FONT=Georgia][COLOR=orange]Did you ever get the feeling that the world was a tuxedo and you were a pair of brown shoes?[/COLOR][/FONT]
[/I][/CENTER]
[B]
[SIZE=3][COLOR=lemonchiffon][I][CENTER][FONT=Georgia]"Fly on dear boy, from this dark world of strife. On to the promised land to eternal life"[/FONT][/CENTER]
[/I][/COLOR][/SIZE][/B]
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Re: SS rank pips
by
Steven M
This statement rather eloquently verbalizes one of the most catastrophic failures of the collecting mind, a mindset that baffles me because of the futility of this approach. How sad that the majority of the collecting "gurus" and "experts" who abide by the so called "textbook items only" following, have relegated common sense as far away from them as the time period from which these items originated. For a time, I found myself sounding like the proverbial broken record in saying that - Collectors need to have the mindset of the past when evaluating and observing the nuances of the items we collect - but to no avail.
Too many times, flawed logic surrounds the logistical process of how, and why during evaluation. If we could all realize that manufacturers and the people who wore these items could not have cared less if these pieces wouldn't comply to the collectors standards of today, we would be much happier in collecting instead of sitting up nights boggling our minds over non-existent nothingness.
In fact, this diseased mindset has become an epidemic and infected many so badly, that I have actually heard collectors say in response to a period photo that 'can't be'..."It must be Photo Shopped".....why? Because our modern day collecting minds have denied the reality of the past.
Thanks for the above said with welcome clarity and force.
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