Hello,
To replace my defunct earlier thread, I am contributing this discussion of enlisted police sleeve eagles. To many this will be repetative, and for that I apologize, but as eagles are my primary interest I like to keep things as up to date as I can. All of the eagles shown are from my collection, and are to the best of my knowledge original to the period.
To begin with, sleeve eagles were specified for wear on the left sleeve of all police uniforms with the consolidated uniform regulations of 1936. These initial regulations specified that the sleeve eagles for NCO's were to be produced in branch colors, with city/district names embroidered above the eagle for all branches except the Wasserschutzpolizei. These "named" pre-war eagles were always embroidered on an oval background, with the eagle sitting low on the oval. NOT in the middle.
Exactly how these insignia were produced is not known. Some examples, such as those shown here are exact copies of each other, while some other patterns are very close but each example is ever so slightly different. I believe that pantographic reproduction was done using a series of connected embroidery machines. A machine operator would trace a standard pattern, or peviously produced eagle, using a pantograph which would copy the traced design to however many machines that were connected in series. In this way all eagles made by the same operator, at the same time will be exact copies of each other, whereas a different operator's output would be a bit different. Clearly some eagles were made one off by hand ,machine operators.
In 1941, after the war was in full swing, the names were ordered removed from the sleeve eagles for security reasons. After that time eagles were produced without names but still on oval background material. Later, when war materials became more scarce, the eagles were embroidered on smaller "cut out" backgrounds to conserve cloth.
This photo shows three Gendarmerie eagles of the same pattern and manufacturer, but produced during the three periods mentioned. The design stays the same but the backing material changes from high quality wool to ersatz wool with scrap inclusions, and finally "cut out" form.
To replace my defunct earlier thread, I am contributing this discussion of enlisted police sleeve eagles. To many this will be repetative, and for that I apologize, but as eagles are my primary interest I like to keep things as up to date as I can. All of the eagles shown are from my collection, and are to the best of my knowledge original to the period.
To begin with, sleeve eagles were specified for wear on the left sleeve of all police uniforms with the consolidated uniform regulations of 1936. These initial regulations specified that the sleeve eagles for NCO's were to be produced in branch colors, with city/district names embroidered above the eagle for all branches except the Wasserschutzpolizei. These "named" pre-war eagles were always embroidered on an oval background, with the eagle sitting low on the oval. NOT in the middle.
Exactly how these insignia were produced is not known. Some examples, such as those shown here are exact copies of each other, while some other patterns are very close but each example is ever so slightly different. I believe that pantographic reproduction was done using a series of connected embroidery machines. A machine operator would trace a standard pattern, or peviously produced eagle, using a pantograph which would copy the traced design to however many machines that were connected in series. In this way all eagles made by the same operator, at the same time will be exact copies of each other, whereas a different operator's output would be a bit different. Clearly some eagles were made one off by hand ,machine operators.
In 1941, after the war was in full swing, the names were ordered removed from the sleeve eagles for security reasons. After that time eagles were produced without names but still on oval background material. Later, when war materials became more scarce, the eagles were embroidered on smaller "cut out" backgrounds to conserve cloth.
This photo shows three Gendarmerie eagles of the same pattern and manufacturer, but produced during the three periods mentioned. The design stays the same but the backing material changes from high quality wool to ersatz wool with scrap inclusions, and finally "cut out" form.
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