First I want to say I am so impressed by your (it seems that everyone here is an expert) immense knowledge on WWII German visor caps and other cloth headgears. This forum is great thanks to you.
As a newbie who is fascinated by this hobby, I have some questions and I hope you can all chime in. Thank you.
(1) "Issue/Government stock" vs. Private purchase. According to Gary Wilkins' book (a great book I think), any visor that is not made of average grade tricot is a private purchase. So essentially caps made of finer grade tricot, doeskin, Eskimo and others are private purchase caps. Is that correct? Also the book mentioned that there are private purchase visor caps that do not bear the maker's mark on the sweatshield. Is that true? My question is, why would the maker not print the maker's mark on the cap at all if it was a private purchase? What was the rationale behind this?
(2) Cap insignia piercing through cap lining: I have heard some people saying that authentic visors would rarely have the prongs of cap insignia piercing through the lining. Is that correct? So should I stay away caps that break this rule? Did German cap makers put the insignia on first before they completed the interior, lining etc.? If not, how did they attach the cap insignia without piercing through the lining?
(3) Build and material quality of the cap: Is it true that government stock/issue caps are inferior to private purchase caps in terms of quality and craftsmanship? Is it true that late war (after 1943) visor caps used materials of lower quality? I remember seeing an officer's visor cap made of very coarse type/grade of wool, not the fine doeskin you usually see on officer visors. Does it mean it might be a fake, or a OR-converted cap?
Thank you for your input and thoughts in advance.
As a newbie who is fascinated by this hobby, I have some questions and I hope you can all chime in. Thank you.
(1) "Issue/Government stock" vs. Private purchase. According to Gary Wilkins' book (a great book I think), any visor that is not made of average grade tricot is a private purchase. So essentially caps made of finer grade tricot, doeskin, Eskimo and others are private purchase caps. Is that correct? Also the book mentioned that there are private purchase visor caps that do not bear the maker's mark on the sweatshield. Is that true? My question is, why would the maker not print the maker's mark on the cap at all if it was a private purchase? What was the rationale behind this?
(2) Cap insignia piercing through cap lining: I have heard some people saying that authentic visors would rarely have the prongs of cap insignia piercing through the lining. Is that correct? So should I stay away caps that break this rule? Did German cap makers put the insignia on first before they completed the interior, lining etc.? If not, how did they attach the cap insignia without piercing through the lining?
(3) Build and material quality of the cap: Is it true that government stock/issue caps are inferior to private purchase caps in terms of quality and craftsmanship? Is it true that late war (after 1943) visor caps used materials of lower quality? I remember seeing an officer's visor cap made of very coarse type/grade of wool, not the fine doeskin you usually see on officer visors. Does it mean it might be a fake, or a OR-converted cap?
Thank you for your input and thoughts in advance.
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