-
-
09-30-2011 11:41 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
It's salty but still nice example of German late war canteen. These steel canteens were produced from 1943 till the end of the war, can also be seen painted green and enameled to black, different shades of blue etc. The cover material is sometimes called Italian gabardine. My experiences about the value in such condition have been between 25-50 euros.
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
by
gnadenlose
It's salty but still nice example of German late war canteen. These steel canteens were produced from 1943 till the end of the war, can also be seen painted green and enameled to black, different shades of blue etc. The cover material is sometimes called Italian gabardine. My experiences about the value in such condition have been between 25-50 euros.
Wow! Thank you so much for the response... I had no idea! I thought it was a cheap knock-off...
Does the red color mean that this canteen was issued to a certain branch of the German military... or did each factory make them in different colors?
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
These are general issue to all branches of the armed forces. Some factories used red enamel, while others used black etc.
Cheers, Ade.
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
by
Adrian Stevenson
These are general issue to all branches of the armed forces. Some factories used red enamel, while others used black etc.
Cheers, Ade.
Thanks for the response! That's exactly what I figured.
This canteen turned out to be a gem in my latest garbage finds... I was expecting it to be a worthless post war remake!
Does this particular type of canteen have an official name, or is it just known as a late war canteen?
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
Always know as the Feldflasche Modell 1931
Please see here:
MP44.nl - German Uniforms and Equipment - Feldflasche
Cheers, Ade.
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
Thanks Ade! You're the best!
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
There's one thing about the steel canteens still a bit unclear to me: they are widely called enammeled, but the red and most of the green ones are actually just painted not enamelled. All the other colours (so-called Schindler's blue, dark blue, black, brown...) are covered with enamel and not painted. As far as I know the enamel is NOT a paint but specific type of covering material for metal. So where does this wide spread "enameled steel canteen" come from? Is it English' rule maybe?
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
Hi, I think that this is "lost in translation". In England we often call any hard finish applied to metal as "enamel", even when it is not a true enamel.
Cheers, Ade,
-
Re: Mystery Red Canteen
by
Adrian Stevenson
Hi, I think that this is "lost in translation". In England we often call any hard finish applied to metal as "enamel", even when it is not a true enamel.
Cheers, Ade,
You're right. When I hear enamel, I think of the shiny red soviet medals and awards...
Bookmarks