Posting this for comments.. Very interesting, as it seems to be made from different makers.. Thoughts welcome! Thanks
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Hi Doug,
Tricky one.
From the obverse design and cutouts it looks like late war Rettenmaier HSF but the hardware is very strange. The upper pin is very Deumer like but the main pin, hinge and the catch is not, and number 3 in the maker’s mark is different than I have seen on Deumers (EK, KVK), but I am not experienced in crosses at all so I could miss something. I lean to think that this is kind of postwar assembly badge. Surely not one of the known wartime HSF variants.
Cheers,
Hubert
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Originally posted by BubbaZ View PostSurely not one of the known wartime HSF variants.
Best regards,
---NormAttached Files
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Originally posted by BubbaZ View PostWhat about a Rettenmaier planchet assembled postwar with postwar hardware and bogus maker's mark? Does it hold water for you?
Well, hand cutting/filing of the margins is not only a feature of the "flatback"/Rettenmaier-attributed badges, and it's also a technique which can hide a multitude of sins on a fake. As a result one can expect a superficial resemblance between "flatbacks" and any zinc fake with hand-filed margins.
But when we think of "flatbacks" we expect striations on the reverse and aggressively hand-cut margins like seen on the reverse of these two examples.
In contrast, the badge in question lacks the linear striations on the reverse surface, and raised margins can be seen wherever it wasn't filed very much. This raised margin is not something you see on typical Rettenmaier-attributed badges. That's not to say that badge couldn't have been made post-war from a wartime die -- I just don't see any proof of it being a leftover wartime planchet.
Best regards,
---NormLast edited by Norm F; 08-01-2015, 07:44 PM.
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Originally posted by Norm F View PostWell, hand cutting/filing of the margins is not only a feature of the "flatback"/Rettenmaier-attributed badges...
Best regards,
---Norm
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