I know that most of us frown upon the practice of cleaning our Iron Crosses. Recently I decided to clean one of mine -- it is an absolutely beautiful cross, but it had what I considered to be ugly patina and wear. There was some sort of black crusted stuff that was unevenly applied all over, the front was splotchy, and the hardware attachments on the reverse had aged differently from the rest of the cross. Before I cleaned it I wasn't even sure the cross was made of silver.
Imperial headgear collectors routinely restore and clean helmets. Edged-weapon collectors do the same thing. Guns are cleaned, if not fully restored. Even enamel awards are cleaned. I'm interested in hearing your thoughts about why Iron Crosses ought to be different. After all, the patina on a 1914 EK has mostly built up in the 60+ years after the collectors' "stunde null" in 1945, or 90+ years if you consider 1918 to be the cut-off date. That usually means that the patina, dirt, and dust has accumulated while the cross sat in a collection, or a drawer -- not on the battlefield.
So, if the patina is not beautiful, why not clean our crosses?
Just a note: I have no intention of cleaning any more at the moment -- this is just an academic question . And I'm not talking about restoring (paint, etc), just cleaning.
Imperial headgear collectors routinely restore and clean helmets. Edged-weapon collectors do the same thing. Guns are cleaned, if not fully restored. Even enamel awards are cleaned. I'm interested in hearing your thoughts about why Iron Crosses ought to be different. After all, the patina on a 1914 EK has mostly built up in the 60+ years after the collectors' "stunde null" in 1945, or 90+ years if you consider 1918 to be the cut-off date. That usually means that the patina, dirt, and dust has accumulated while the cross sat in a collection, or a drawer -- not on the battlefield.
So, if the patina is not beautiful, why not clean our crosses?
Just a note: I have no intention of cleaning any more at the moment -- this is just an academic question . And I'm not talking about restoring (paint, etc), just cleaning.
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