No Michael... regarding NSKK nationality colors used in Belgium, Yellow is definitely for Walloon volunteers and Flemish volunteers used Green as their national color in the NSKK (eventhough their national shield had a yellow back ground... so I can understand your confusion!)
Note that actually early in the recruitment it was even more complex: the Flemish NSKK volunteers associated with DeVlag used black as branch color and the Walloon members with ties to AGRA (Amis de Grand Reich Allemand) used rust brown farbe instead of Rex Yellow!
So infact initially 4 branch colors were chosen for Belgian NSKK volunteers depending on their political loyalty (and they wore sleeve shields matching those affiliations)!
Later in 1943 all this got streamlined and the Flemish used green and Walloons Yellow. Nick
Here are 2 fezzes, the one with (alas) its insignia stripped is the real deal !!! and most likely ex Dachau stores, as its in unused condition based on the mint stainfree leather sweatband,
the other is a Moroccon wannabe (wicker reenforced liner with fake metal SS schirmmutze insignia...)
What a difference!
Here's my latest acquisition a uniform removed Luftschutz breast badge! Nick
PS: in the upper right corner you'll notice the bottom part of a Luftschutz BeVo cap insignia
(just a downsized version of same design!)
2 USAAF cadet caps, one regular model and the other a crusher type with that 50 mission look (rare!!!). The blue band and winged prop insignia would be removed after graduation! Both 1941 dated.
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