Thanks for the spirited discussion again guys! I will try to find the gold content of the thread starter this week if you would like to give everything else a rest for a while. I will check into the instrumentation here as to determining if the piece is hollow. I may have to send it some where for that. I will check with Don to see if he knows someone.
As to the eagle tongue issue, Jim has gone the extra mile to show that they are from the same dies but the pictures are affected by resolution, lighting, coloring, etc., as well as the tails not being cut out. Thanks for all of the work on that, Jim! I would suggest also that there are different eagles on the same piece (from the same dies) that show the tongues in a better light, so to speak. The tongues are more visible on some of the heads. One can see the same type of variation on Wagner eagles. Emperor Franz Joseph's cross in [I]Prussian Blue[I] has the entire top of one head missing, possibly due to only a die variation.
As seen in other WAF threads on the PlM, Wagner and Friedlander crosses are known to have come from the same Wagner dies, with Friedlander finishing their crosses and marking them in their own way. The relationship between Wagner and JH Werner is unclear. With only the one JHW marked Wagner cross in existence that has been discovered so far, it may have been a retailing relationship. Since both Friedlander and JHW were contemporaries, jewelers of the Court of the Kaiser, and finished Wagner crosses, they may have been associated in other ways. We may never know, I realize, but JHW may have been a retailer for the goods of all three firms, as they were allowed a shop in one of the new hotels that was constructed in 1912 at the behest of the Kaiser. This was done to try to address the shortage of rooms for travelers at that time who had business near or in the government district. It is conjecture to be sure, but since the three firms cooperated on Wagner crosses, they may have had other relationships such as finishing/reworking other pieces.
As to the eagle tongue issue, Jim has gone the extra mile to show that they are from the same dies but the pictures are affected by resolution, lighting, coloring, etc., as well as the tails not being cut out. Thanks for all of the work on that, Jim! I would suggest also that there are different eagles on the same piece (from the same dies) that show the tongues in a better light, so to speak. The tongues are more visible on some of the heads. One can see the same type of variation on Wagner eagles. Emperor Franz Joseph's cross in [I]Prussian Blue[I] has the entire top of one head missing, possibly due to only a die variation.
As seen in other WAF threads on the PlM, Wagner and Friedlander crosses are known to have come from the same Wagner dies, with Friedlander finishing their crosses and marking them in their own way. The relationship between Wagner and JH Werner is unclear. With only the one JHW marked Wagner cross in existence that has been discovered so far, it may have been a retailing relationship. Since both Friedlander and JHW were contemporaries, jewelers of the Court of the Kaiser, and finished Wagner crosses, they may have been associated in other ways. We may never know, I realize, but JHW may have been a retailer for the goods of all three firms, as they were allowed a shop in one of the new hotels that was constructed in 1912 at the behest of the Kaiser. This was done to try to address the shortage of rooms for travelers at that time who had business near or in the government district. It is conjecture to be sure, but since the three firms cooperated on Wagner crosses, they may have had other relationships such as finishing/reworking other pieces.
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