It has been written several times and it is commonly accepted that spanish crosses came in red, blue or green case, depending the class: gold crosses in a red/marroon case, silver crosses in a blue case, and bronze crosses in green case.
Nevertheless, regularly crosses pop up in their what seeems to be original case that don't correspond to this rule. I.e. bronze cross in a blue case, silver or gold cross in a green case.
LDO was instituted in 1941, so we can conclude that after that date, privatly purchased crosses came in an LDO case. Certainly old stocks of early cases still remained available during a short range of time.
Do you know red LDO case for spanish cross ? in which kind of case could come a nice Meybauer L/13 gilded bronze cross or an unmarked Deumer gold cross?
Another question: do you know original early green case (like the blue one) for bronze cross without LDO stamped inside or on the top lid ?
jacques
Nevertheless, regularly crosses pop up in their what seeems to be original case that don't correspond to this rule. I.e. bronze cross in a blue case, silver or gold cross in a green case.
LDO was instituted in 1941, so we can conclude that after that date, privatly purchased crosses came in an LDO case. Certainly old stocks of early cases still remained available during a short range of time.
Do you know red LDO case for spanish cross ? in which kind of case could come a nice Meybauer L/13 gilded bronze cross or an unmarked Deumer gold cross?
Another question: do you know original early green case (like the blue one) for bronze cross without LDO stamped inside or on the top lid ?
jacques
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