The photos are small but the Destroyer outside of the wrapper looks like an excellent mint Tombak S&L. The Auxiliary Cruiser badge is harder to see; it looks sort of like a one-piece flat-back or Souval but it has a suspiciously post-war looking main pin. Better photos are necessary.
Very interesting! The destroyer is a beauty! The packet that the aux cruiser is in is definitely a genuine wartime LDO packet and I really like the contact corrosion areas visible which indicates to me that the badge has been in the bag for many many years. The setup is not one I have seen though- could be a very interesting find and give us some new knowledge on late war badges
Although the current photo is somewhat inadequate, the area of concern is the top of the main pin. That shape has not been seen to date on any wartime Kriegsmarine badge to my knowledge whereas it is quite reminiscent of pins of the 1960's and 1970's. See the comparison to a 1970's '57-form badge on the left and the c. 1960's Souval German Cross on the right.
Hypothetically, if the badge was assembled and put in the cellophane packet in the 1960's that leaves 50 years of aging to account for the appearance that Patrick is noting.
thats a very nice unknown maker- so called 'flatback' auxiliary cruiser. The shape of the pin was obviously an illusion caused by the cellophane. A really great couple of badges, not often at all you find KM badges in original cello bags
Wow, that wrapper had really distorted the pin appearance!
I agree with Patrick, a nice condition unworn "flatback". If you've been following the recent threads on this topic in the Heer section, the likelihood is that the maker of this badge was Alois Rettenmaier, Schwäbisch-Gmund. The quality is crude compared to official award pieces but likely late war manufacture.
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