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    Thanks, Trevor--I thought my "close up" would post larger than it did, but photobucket seems to have shrunk it back to original in the upload.

    For comparison, here is another PlM, I would argue a typical Wagner (GFM Ferdinand Schorner, from a site called "The Third Reich in Color"). The eagle size seems overtly different, to my eye, compared to that of Goering's PlM.



    Note head, neck and shoulders of eagles below the figurative line connecting the vertices of the notches at arms' ends.
    Last edited by Zepenthusiast; 01-31-2011, 05:23 PM.

    Comment


      Here's the two side by side, scaled the same. One has to ask, if the cross Goering is wearing is not the alleged "Goering Dead Eye" or something hauntingly like it, how can one argue it is a conventional Wagner?





      I think a good case can be made the overlap of the "P" and "o" is visible in the Goering shot, too.

      Comment


        Eagle, a member from Germany, just posted a wonderfully concise summary of the Godet companies--plural now well-established to be correct--organization in the 1930's and thereafter, in the Godet thread coinciding with this one. The multiple great contributions to that thread do much to reinforce the contention here: that the Godet brothers, now legally separated from the original family company structure, would produce a PlM unique to Gebruder Godet and identifiably different from the more commonly recognized private-purchase cross should be a far less controversial claim.
        Marshall has always (very reasonably) asked "Why?" and this makes for a very good reason!

        Comment


          Is there a connection beyween the "Schickle" PLM and the "other" Godet?

          Comment


            I would say 1) it makes sense there could be--perhaps a need to "revitalize" their PlM to better compete with the Gebr. Godet version, for what private purchase market existed at the time and 2) you have provided, in post #110 of the Godet thread, several examples of RK hints/connections to Schickle to suggest such an arrangement potentially did exist. It has been previously noted the "Schickle" PlM has a somewhat Art Deco inspired tail feather arrangement, in contrast to the more Baroque curviness of the original private purchase version. Since J. Godet & Sohn no longer included any actual Godets from the sound of it, and the dies must have been aging substantially by then, why not "farm it out" it Schickle to update the cross?

            Comment


              Originally posted by Zepenthusiast View Post
              ?... Since J. Godet & Sohn no longer included any actual Godets from the sound of it, and the dies must have been aging substantially by then, why not "farm it out" it Schickle to update the cross?
              ... So that Schickle could then mark the odd one JG&S???

              http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...239695&page=19

              Remember, even the connection of the 'Schickle PLM' to Otto Schickle themselves is somewhat tenuous. We refer to it as the Schikle PLM, but the picture of the Schickle PLM was - as far as I understand it - on a LOOSE LEAF, UNMARKED page, sold by Weitze to Gordon along with the marked Otto Schickle catalogue.

              Although it is likely, there is still not 100 % definitive proof that the page actually belonged with the Schickle catalogue. I know there was huge conjecture over the tank badge (which I didn't follow), so someone correct me if I'm wrong on that one.

              Marshall
              Last edited by Biro; 02-05-2011, 05:32 PM.

              Comment


                Originally posted by Zepenthusiast View Post
                ?... Since J. Godet & Sohn no longer included any actual Godets from the sound of it....
                Bit ambiguous - Please explain?

                Comment


                  Originally posted by Biro View Post
                  ...the picture of the Schickle PLM was - as far as I understand it - on a LOOSE LEAF, UNMARKED page, sold by Weitze to Gordon along with the marked Otto Schickle catalogue.
                  That's my understanding as well.

                  On a related but separate subject:

                  One major question will be, who ended up with the Godet dies after "the split"? I have some good preliminary evidence that it may have been Gebrüder Godet who maintained at least some of the tools and dies from J. Godet.

                  For a teaser, check out p. 286 (a J. Godet PLM mini) and then p. 295 (a Gebrüder Godet pie-wedge mini that's a pretty close match) in Prussian Blue. I know these are minis, and I am not at all confident enough to make any generalizations yet about who ended up with what, and who had to redesign what, but I think that caution is merited when discussing the subject until we know more.

                  I'll say again that I have no opinion (yet) on the authenticity or period of manufacture of the "Dead Eye" PLM.
                  Best regards,
                  Streptile

                  Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Biro View Post
                    Bit ambiguous - Please explain?
                    I believe it's this:

                    J. Godet did not employ any person by the name of Godet after (let's say) 1930.

                    Is that what you meant there?
                    Best regards,
                    Streptile

                    Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by streptile View Post
                      ?.... I have some good preliminary evidence that it may have been Gebrüder Godet who maintained at least some of the tools and dies from J. Godet...
                      Can you make that a separate thread Trevor - perhaps one that can be linked to in your 'GODET' company thread.

                      It'll get buried here....

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by streptile View Post
                        ... For a teaser, check out p. 286 (a J. Godet PLM mini) and then p. 295 (a Gebrüder Godet pie-wedge mini that's a pretty close match) in Prussian Blue....
                        Irrefutably the same mini PLM on both

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by Biro View Post
                          Can you make that a separate thread Trevor - perhaps one that can be linked to in your 'GODET' company thread. It'll get buried here....
                          Yes, of course. It'll be a little while, but I'll set it up elsewhere when I'm more confident of the facts.
                          Best regards,
                          Streptile

                          Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)

                          Comment


                            Trevor did take my comment correctly about no-one bearing the name Godet being with J. Godet & Sohn after the sale, that being my interpretation of the two (? only) Godet brothers running Gebr. Godet, and all the discussion of ownership of JG&S not including anyone bearing that surname thence.

                            That "J.G. & S." marked "Schickle" is regarded as suspicious, though, right Marshall? The mark doesn't directly resemble any of the known "J.G. & .S" versions otherwise identified, unless I am mistaken, and it was clearly added to the cross suspension on a plate of some kind. The only other "Schickle" type bearing a J.G. &S of which I am aware is the one from the Wolff group, which came under considerable fire for the same reason. Even if authentic as a marking, no reason Schickle couldn't be making the type for the consortium and using the most prominent relevant mark belonging to the allied group of companies, and/or Schickle marketing the cross on behalf of the same outfit (who actually made it, that is, perhaps being of less immediate importance).

                            Comment


                              And...sorry, my friend, but those two minis, while very close, are not identical! Check out the pie slices: the hole is not at the same height relative to the cross body (and that cannot be a variation in hand finishing). There are other subtle metallic differences--angle of the hyphens, for instance, and the shaping of the wing-thigh spaces; one might argue the latter two, but the suspension can't be explained otherwise. It can't be drilling variation, either (in case that would be suggested to explain the difference), as the p. 295 example has a raised rim around the hole front and back, implying it had to be formed in place as is. The other one may have such a rim, too, but harder to tell.

                              A tribute to the sense these had to have a particular "right" form! So...evidence they were working off different dies???

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by Zepenthusiast View Post
                                ...That "J.G. & S." marked "Schickle" is regarded as suspicious, though, right Marshall? The mark doesn't directly resemble any of the known "J.G. & .S" versions otherwise identified, unless I am mistaken, and it was clearly added to the cross suspension on a plate of some kind.

                                The only other "Schickle" type bearing a J.G. &S of which I am aware is the one from the Wolff group, which came under considerable fire for the same reason...
                                The PLM in the link I posted was the one from the Wolff group Jim, which came under considerable fire (from me anyway) not because of the marking, but because it was sold alongside Wolff's bona-fide wartime Godet, as a period piece (1914-1918) not a later replacement. The implication from the family and the dealer being that both types were manufactured concurrently during the war.


                                Originally posted by Zepenthusiast View Post
                                ... no reason Schickle couldn't be making the type for the consortium and using the most prominent relevant mark belonging to the allied group of companies, and/or Schickle marketing the cross on behalf of the same outfit (who actually made it, that is, perhaps being of less immediate importance)...
                                I totally beleive that in the case of the PLM associated with the Schickle catalogue, that Schickle were selling on behalf - I doubt VERY much they had any hand in the manufacturing.

                                Who made it then, of course, WAS irrelevant, but now - given that we are trying to establish which 'GODET' company made what, it is of the utmost importance.

                                Comment

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