Hello everyone:
I now have the opportunity to buy a very nice cased, maker-marked War Merit Cros with Swords 1st Class. The medal itself is the earlier tombak, nickel/silver-covered type, in exactly the condition I like, with a really nice darker tone in the recesses, making all the details stand out just right. The case is also in great shape.
Okay, now here's the part that's making me dismiss it, at least currently:
The box has the name of a medal maker stamped on the inside of the case. However, the number on the medal is a number that does not match up with the maker name on the case. So, unless there's something I don't know about medals and cases, I'm assuming that the case is not the one in which the medal was originally issued. Since this is just an assumption (logical as it is), I'd still like to check it with others, before I dismiss this otherwise nice example of a cased medal. Yes, of course, I would go ahead and buy it anyway, if it was appropriately discounted for the mismatch. However, at $350.00, I don't really see any discounts. Instead, it seems to me that the price reflects a medal in such condition, also in a case that matches the maker name.
Finally, how do you think the average collector values or devalues a mismatched medal like this? Is it common to just put a medal in whatever maker's case you can get, and just be happy with it, without much devaluation of the set as a whole. Or, is this something that you would advise one to pass on--especially taking the price into consideration? I can see the point of it not mattering if, of course, the maker name is not stamped on the case. However, when it is, it seems to be a problem. Otherwise, I'd say that most collectors would just be happy to get about whatever they could find?
Chris
P.S. Maybe this is all just a no-brainer, and mismatched maker-marked medals and cases are just a commonly-known no, no. However, in this hobby, it seems that it's always better to ask first, sometimes even before assuming the obvious.
I now have the opportunity to buy a very nice cased, maker-marked War Merit Cros with Swords 1st Class. The medal itself is the earlier tombak, nickel/silver-covered type, in exactly the condition I like, with a really nice darker tone in the recesses, making all the details stand out just right. The case is also in great shape.
Okay, now here's the part that's making me dismiss it, at least currently:
The box has the name of a medal maker stamped on the inside of the case. However, the number on the medal is a number that does not match up with the maker name on the case. So, unless there's something I don't know about medals and cases, I'm assuming that the case is not the one in which the medal was originally issued. Since this is just an assumption (logical as it is), I'd still like to check it with others, before I dismiss this otherwise nice example of a cased medal. Yes, of course, I would go ahead and buy it anyway, if it was appropriately discounted for the mismatch. However, at $350.00, I don't really see any discounts. Instead, it seems to me that the price reflects a medal in such condition, also in a case that matches the maker name.
Finally, how do you think the average collector values or devalues a mismatched medal like this? Is it common to just put a medal in whatever maker's case you can get, and just be happy with it, without much devaluation of the set as a whole. Or, is this something that you would advise one to pass on--especially taking the price into consideration? I can see the point of it not mattering if, of course, the maker name is not stamped on the case. However, when it is, it seems to be a problem. Otherwise, I'd say that most collectors would just be happy to get about whatever they could find?
Chris
P.S. Maybe this is all just a no-brainer, and mismatched maker-marked medals and cases are just a commonly-known no, no. However, in this hobby, it seems that it's always better to ask first, sometimes even before assuming the obvious.
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