A fellow Forum member graciously loaned me two reproduction tropical army billed field caps (one officer's cap and one EM cap) a couple months ago which I photograhed and returned to him. They were sold to him by an Internet dealer in reproduction uniform items and were not misrepresented.
However, these caps have been seen for several years on various Internet web sites and auctions misrepresented as originals and offered for many times their original price of about $80 for an enlisted man's cap. They have been seen both with and without soutaches.
One of the most obvious ways to determine their fradulent nature is the ink stamp inside on the lining. I'm attaching a photo of this copy of a Clemens Wagner ink stamp. It is an oval with CLEMENS WAGNER at the top, a "+" sign at either end of the oval, the date '1941' in the middle, and the city BRAUNSWEIG below.
The city name, Braunschweig, is misspelled. The makers of this modern cap left out the letters 'ch' and this is a dead give-away that you are looking at a fake.
Clemens Wagner was one of the most prolific makers of tropical army caps and used several different ink stamps. In each original, the city name is properly spelled. Incidentally, there is no other city with this name in Germany so it can't be claimed that it was made in the "other" city with that name.
Now I'm seeing Luftwaffe tropical caps with this same exact stamp complete with the misspelled city name including a "LW Tropical Enlisted Overseas Cap" on a prominent MAX/GD certified dealer's web site for $650. That is NOT to say this dealer is knowingly misrepresenting a fake as an original. None of us can know this huge field of German militaria in every aspect and detail. We all get fooled from time to time -- even the best of dealers.
Only a couple years ago, a large outdoors catalog supply house was offering the army version of these caps with a white soutache and the same ink stamp for $79.95. I still have their ad for reference.
There are far more reproductions and outright fakes of tropical army caps on the market today and it now appears the same maker is producing LW caps to fool us with.
However, these caps have been seen for several years on various Internet web sites and auctions misrepresented as originals and offered for many times their original price of about $80 for an enlisted man's cap. They have been seen both with and without soutaches.
One of the most obvious ways to determine their fradulent nature is the ink stamp inside on the lining. I'm attaching a photo of this copy of a Clemens Wagner ink stamp. It is an oval with CLEMENS WAGNER at the top, a "+" sign at either end of the oval, the date '1941' in the middle, and the city BRAUNSWEIG below.
The city name, Braunschweig, is misspelled. The makers of this modern cap left out the letters 'ch' and this is a dead give-away that you are looking at a fake.
Clemens Wagner was one of the most prolific makers of tropical army caps and used several different ink stamps. In each original, the city name is properly spelled. Incidentally, there is no other city with this name in Germany so it can't be claimed that it was made in the "other" city with that name.
Now I'm seeing Luftwaffe tropical caps with this same exact stamp complete with the misspelled city name including a "LW Tropical Enlisted Overseas Cap" on a prominent MAX/GD certified dealer's web site for $650. That is NOT to say this dealer is knowingly misrepresenting a fake as an original. None of us can know this huge field of German militaria in every aspect and detail. We all get fooled from time to time -- even the best of dealers.
Only a couple years ago, a large outdoors catalog supply house was offering the army version of these caps with a white soutache and the same ink stamp for $79.95. I still have their ad for reference.
There are far more reproductions and outright fakes of tropical army caps on the market today and it now appears the same maker is producing LW caps to fool us with.
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