Regretably, most people have little, if any, real knowledge about S&L higher grade add-ons to the RK. They hear "S&L??????" and immediately roll their eyes. It is a sort of Pavlovian reflex.
These pieces, as far as I can realistically determine, were never intended to be award pieces, but were most assuredly, from a manufacturing standpoint, "right up the alley" for the company whose in-house designer, Herr Escher, was behind the RK to begin with. Who knows how many other companies also flirted with making some, just to be able to say they did. (Even Deumer, in the same town, advertised Oakleaves for sale.) I wish we had comprehensive catalogs for each of the years 1939 -41 for all decoration manufacturers, just to see who was doing what in the RK field. Unfortunately we don't. I bet we'd be surprised.
In any case, there are enough real differences in S&L types, for the people who study such things, to allow a reasonable degree of confidence to determine period of manufacture. 99.9% of the S&L higher grades seen are postwar made (and some are even very nice indeed). It's the .1% I care about......
These pieces, as far as I can realistically determine, were never intended to be award pieces, but were most assuredly, from a manufacturing standpoint, "right up the alley" for the company whose in-house designer, Herr Escher, was behind the RK to begin with. Who knows how many other companies also flirted with making some, just to be able to say they did. (Even Deumer, in the same town, advertised Oakleaves for sale.) I wish we had comprehensive catalogs for each of the years 1939 -41 for all decoration manufacturers, just to see who was doing what in the RK field. Unfortunately we don't. I bet we'd be surprised.
In any case, there are enough real differences in S&L types, for the people who study such things, to allow a reasonable degree of confidence to determine period of manufacture. 99.9% of the S&L higher grades seen are postwar made (and some are even very nice indeed). It's the .1% I care about......
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