If the Cejalvo crosses have been made since the early 1970s, they could easily have been fabricated by creating a master, through photoetching, of the cross face with its crown and lettering. That would explain how the lettering has essentially the size and shape of mine, yet the enamel could be flush against the edges of the letters, as it appears to be on your cross, instead of over-flowing their edges, as it does on mine.
The same die or mold could not have readily made both the letters on my cross and those on yours, since what you can see on mine is not all which is there in metal. "Hand finishing" is responsible for the final shape and quality of the lettering on my cross, for sure, but not just in the sense of brushing away more or less enamel from a letter with sloping sides.
The same die or mold could not have readily made both the letters on my cross and those on yours, since what you can see on mine is not all which is there in metal. "Hand finishing" is responsible for the final shape and quality of the lettering on my cross, for sure, but not just in the sense of brushing away more or less enamel from a letter with sloping sides.
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