Good evening gents,
This is one of those "don't ask the question if you're not going to like the answer" cases, but this dagger was sent to me today as part of a group of items I was buying. Rare daggers are not an area I'm very knowledgeable in so I must ask for the opinions of you Röhm & Pack experts out there. I searched high & low on here for some good examples to compare this to and found some crackin' "full" Röhms that some members posted. The hardest thing was to find some that had bad inscriptions and EP&S logos to use as a standard to judge this against. It seems that most of the pics of sketchy Packs were removed for obvious reasons.
With Pack being the most widely faked of the fake "full" Röhms I am preparing myself for some bad news and am not the type to grasp on one thing or another to make the case that something is good. That being said I do find some things I like on this. I compared the inscription and name to known good examples and found almost a 99% match on letter characteristics, spacing, etc.. The logo is positioned nice and close to the crossguard, but has me a bit confused because there seems to be some debate among members here on the "&" in EP&S and whether it should be smaller than the EP and S letters themselves. I found a few SAs on here that show the "&" the same size and these daggers were all given a thumbs-up?? Also, I looked at the EP&S SS examples in Wittmann's book on SS swords and daggers and the "&" is the same size as mine?? So is the accepted theory that only EP&S "Full" Röhms have a smaller "&" sign to make the logo legit to the period?? Lastly on the logo, although it's hard to see in the pics, Siegfried's hammer is a fully etched rectanglular block. The scabbard, which I didn't want to waste the time photographing is just a standard painted type with fittings that are consistent with the condition of the dagger.
The grip is a nice lightly toned oak, indicative of an early production if I read this point correctly and the dagger itself feels like it has never been apart. With a loop you can see that small blemish on the "eu" in "Freundschaft" has effected the etched steel there as well so it doesn't look like the blemish was there then the blade was etched over it. Anyway, didn't mean to get long-winded so I'll let the pics do the talking.
I sincerely appreciate any/all comments!!
v/r
Bob
This is one of those "don't ask the question if you're not going to like the answer" cases, but this dagger was sent to me today as part of a group of items I was buying. Rare daggers are not an area I'm very knowledgeable in so I must ask for the opinions of you Röhm & Pack experts out there. I searched high & low on here for some good examples to compare this to and found some crackin' "full" Röhms that some members posted. The hardest thing was to find some that had bad inscriptions and EP&S logos to use as a standard to judge this against. It seems that most of the pics of sketchy Packs were removed for obvious reasons.
With Pack being the most widely faked of the fake "full" Röhms I am preparing myself for some bad news and am not the type to grasp on one thing or another to make the case that something is good. That being said I do find some things I like on this. I compared the inscription and name to known good examples and found almost a 99% match on letter characteristics, spacing, etc.. The logo is positioned nice and close to the crossguard, but has me a bit confused because there seems to be some debate among members here on the "&" in EP&S and whether it should be smaller than the EP and S letters themselves. I found a few SAs on here that show the "&" the same size and these daggers were all given a thumbs-up?? Also, I looked at the EP&S SS examples in Wittmann's book on SS swords and daggers and the "&" is the same size as mine?? So is the accepted theory that only EP&S "Full" Röhms have a smaller "&" sign to make the logo legit to the period?? Lastly on the logo, although it's hard to see in the pics, Siegfried's hammer is a fully etched rectanglular block. The scabbard, which I didn't want to waste the time photographing is just a standard painted type with fittings that are consistent with the condition of the dagger.
The grip is a nice lightly toned oak, indicative of an early production if I read this point correctly and the dagger itself feels like it has never been apart. With a loop you can see that small blemish on the "eu" in "Freundschaft" has effected the etched steel there as well so it doesn't look like the blemish was there then the blade was etched over it. Anyway, didn't mean to get long-winded so I'll let the pics do the talking.
I sincerely appreciate any/all comments!!
v/r
Bob
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