In my English dictionary I can read:
“Hobby, An activity or interest pursued outside one’s regular work primary for pleasure.”
Well in Spanish it has the same meaning and yes! Collecting these military antics has all the elements to be called a Hobby. However, I see it a little bit more than that, I see it as the searching for history, to have with me a little part of that history, to touch history through them and a “museum” of crafmanship of the past (a very good art). Something deeper than just a hobby, but still a great pleasure.
For what I have learned in this forum (and others), the fakes of KM badges are getting better and better everyday (they even deceive some old collectors sometimes!!). Let’s think when technology is so advance (Star Trek time), that these fakes will be impossible to spot. No one will probe that the badges he owns are original because the fakes will be just as good as the original. Will the “hobby” die that day? The only solution could be to track the badges back on time. It can be “easy” now but in 100 years. For example I should ask the dealers from where they got the badges, and then ask the next one and so on, until get back to 1945 and before.
Will the hobby die one day because of perfect fakes?
Regards,
Edgar
“Hobby, An activity or interest pursued outside one’s regular work primary for pleasure.”
Well in Spanish it has the same meaning and yes! Collecting these military antics has all the elements to be called a Hobby. However, I see it a little bit more than that, I see it as the searching for history, to have with me a little part of that history, to touch history through them and a “museum” of crafmanship of the past (a very good art). Something deeper than just a hobby, but still a great pleasure.
For what I have learned in this forum (and others), the fakes of KM badges are getting better and better everyday (they even deceive some old collectors sometimes!!). Let’s think when technology is so advance (Star Trek time), that these fakes will be impossible to spot. No one will probe that the badges he owns are original because the fakes will be just as good as the original. Will the “hobby” die that day? The only solution could be to track the badges back on time. It can be “easy” now but in 100 years. For example I should ask the dealers from where they got the badges, and then ask the next one and so on, until get back to 1945 and before.
Will the hobby die one day because of perfect fakes?
Regards,
Edgar
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