LW tropical officer's cap
I should have added that the LW tropical field cap in my previous post without the false turn up sections on each side was also used by the SS and I have photos of one of these made by Paul Waggenmann. Many LW units in North Africa were only issued the tropical Fliegermütze and one FJ vet told me that only NCOs and officers in his unit in Tunisia had the billed field caps and that these were probably private purchase items. Still there are plenty of photos showing LW troops wearing tan billed field caps so some units got them and others didn't.
I've even seen two made in Naples Italy by an Italian maker and they were a direct copy of the Heer M40 tropical billed field cap but made in tan instead of olive green and with LW insignia. One was an officer's cap and the other was an EM cap.
Attached is a photo of one of the tropical LW officer's caps I have. It has a maker's ink stamped logo inside dated 1942 and the officer's embroidered initials on one inside edge. The lining is the rarely seen burgundy color. The LW aluminum Tropenhelm eagle is attached by a string knotted through a hole in each end of the wing and the fabric shows no signs of stitching. The material is slightly darker underneath the metal eagle. The cockade is also the metal type normally found on a continental visor cap. The grommets have a brown external finish and are made from an alloy containing steel as they attract a magnet.
Officer's caps like this were largely a private purchase item.
I should have added that the LW tropical field cap in my previous post without the false turn up sections on each side was also used by the SS and I have photos of one of these made by Paul Waggenmann. Many LW units in North Africa were only issued the tropical Fliegermütze and one FJ vet told me that only NCOs and officers in his unit in Tunisia had the billed field caps and that these were probably private purchase items. Still there are plenty of photos showing LW troops wearing tan billed field caps so some units got them and others didn't.
I've even seen two made in Naples Italy by an Italian maker and they were a direct copy of the Heer M40 tropical billed field cap but made in tan instead of olive green and with LW insignia. One was an officer's cap and the other was an EM cap.
Attached is a photo of one of the tropical LW officer's caps I have. It has a maker's ink stamped logo inside dated 1942 and the officer's embroidered initials on one inside edge. The lining is the rarely seen burgundy color. The LW aluminum Tropenhelm eagle is attached by a string knotted through a hole in each end of the wing and the fabric shows no signs of stitching. The material is slightly darker underneath the metal eagle. The cockade is also the metal type normally found on a continental visor cap. The grommets have a brown external finish and are made from an alloy containing steel as they attract a magnet.
Officer's caps like this were largely a private purchase item.
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