any thoughts on this strange gold PAF eagle?
not marked on the back by Stanley..and the feathers are strange...
but it does look like a Stanley production
anyone ever see something like this before?
Polish - 9 Infantry Battalion ?Flandryjski? - Badge WW2 on eBay (end time 18-Jun-10 21:19:40 BST)
What do people think? I'm very tempted. Just the price putting me off somewhat!
a good badge..a bit rough and worn out on the top ...
but original....and a decent price ...
Not as difficult as it seems.
Only the typed portion is ‘real’. The remainder of the document including the rubber stamp is an inkjet print of a scanned original. After printing the document was run through a typewriter and then subjected to some ‘stressing’ to give it an aged appearance. A smudge here, a bent corner there, and presto – ready to go onto the collector’s market.
With the advent of modern scanners. high resolution printing, and photo processing software the making up of counterfeit documents such as these would be very easy. All it would take is a simple scan of an original, digitally remove the typewritten portion, print onto off-white card stock paper and put through an old fashioned typewriter . . . and you have the products that alexmajca had listed. One of which found its way into my collection.
Again, to the casual eye they look very authentic. But an examination through a 10X or stronger magnifier quickly reveals otherwise. And as Michal mentioned, the counterfeiters of these slipped up on a couple of things that are also giveaways.
Regards,
Tony
All thoughts and opinions expressed are those of my own and should not be mistaken for medical and/or legal advice.
"Tomorrow hopes we have learned something from yesterday." - John Wayne
yeah....I understand that..
but what about the stamp?
explain how easy it is to replicate that?
The stamp is NOT applied separately. It is part of the data obtained by the scanner from the original award document.
Think of it this way: If you take one of your original award documents bearing a stamp in blue ink to a colour copier you will receive a colour copy of that document showing a stamp in blue ink. A scanner sees it the same way, and will reproduce a nice blue stamp that looks exactly like the original.
As mentioned, the original document was scanned in its entirety. Then the recipient’s name and serial number were digitally removed. This allows for blanks (bearing the rubber stamp) to be printed. These blanks were then taken to a typewriter and the names and serial numbers were manually typed in.
As evidenced by Michal’s research of the 7th Armoured document these are fictional names. In the case of that document the name and number did not match the existing award records from Marek Wronski’s book.
All thoughts and opinions expressed are those of my own and should not be mistaken for medical and/or legal advice.
"Tomorrow hopes we have learned something from yesterday." - John Wayne
thanks for explaining that. I think I will warm up the scanner.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
scary stuff
Very strange badge – totally different pattern than the original one.
All S&S plastic badges have company’s logo and number – presumably the serial / machine
Looks like somebody is trying to create some sort of repos.
I do not think we are seeing the S&S specimen of this badge (which would really be good!)
What is the source of this picture?
I have not seen this version of a plastic badge before either: interesting...
Cheers, Ade.
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