Mike,
Thanks...I actually don't deserve much credit, I believe they all came from this forum. I had just saved them because they were unusual.
Brian,
I actually thought I had covered this before. This wrap may have been issued and just unworn with the tag never removed, which renders your question N/A. There are dozens of Luft. uniforms in collections with full insignia and factory size tags on the sleeve. No one seems to question those?
I don't think anyone can say with absolute surety that all wraps, whatever type, came from the factory with A, B, and C. None of us were there, I don't think there are many factory worker witnesses left, and I don't think we will ever know. We can postulate as many theories as we want, but they are not provable. Only forensically can we even show that something is WWII applied, and even then its only an educated guess.
For whatever reason...this wrap appears to have all factory applied insignia. There are plenty of photographs around depicting factory workers on an assembly line and the tunics appear to have all insignia. Unless you can come up with an eye witness, some mystery will remain. Each individual, based on his experience, could reach a conclusion, real or fake, on this wrap in person. They stand a 50/50 chance of being right.
Derka,
Remember, there actually is no RBNR number....there is an NR number (possibly a pre RBNR numbering system?). Also remember that I know next to nothing about HBT wrappers. Your theory about the possibility that it might be a pre second pattern wrap or transistional piece is WAY better than my thoughts. I don't even have references on HBT stuff, just a few scattered pics, so I was totally shooting in the dark. Makes much better sense especially with the double row of buttons. How does the unusual NR number fit in your timeline?
Thanks for all your help on this topic since I am winging it after seeing the wrap in person at the beginning of May.
Richard P
Thanks...I actually don't deserve much credit, I believe they all came from this forum. I had just saved them because they were unusual.
Brian,
I actually thought I had covered this before. This wrap may have been issued and just unworn with the tag never removed, which renders your question N/A. There are dozens of Luft. uniforms in collections with full insignia and factory size tags on the sleeve. No one seems to question those?
I don't think anyone can say with absolute surety that all wraps, whatever type, came from the factory with A, B, and C. None of us were there, I don't think there are many factory worker witnesses left, and I don't think we will ever know. We can postulate as many theories as we want, but they are not provable. Only forensically can we even show that something is WWII applied, and even then its only an educated guess.
For whatever reason...this wrap appears to have all factory applied insignia. There are plenty of photographs around depicting factory workers on an assembly line and the tunics appear to have all insignia. Unless you can come up with an eye witness, some mystery will remain. Each individual, based on his experience, could reach a conclusion, real or fake, on this wrap in person. They stand a 50/50 chance of being right.
Derka,
Remember, there actually is no RBNR number....there is an NR number (possibly a pre RBNR numbering system?). Also remember that I know next to nothing about HBT wrappers. Your theory about the possibility that it might be a pre second pattern wrap or transistional piece is WAY better than my thoughts. I don't even have references on HBT stuff, just a few scattered pics, so I was totally shooting in the dark. Makes much better sense especially with the double row of buttons. How does the unusual NR number fit in your timeline?
Thanks for all your help on this topic since I am winging it after seeing the wrap in person at the beginning of May.
Richard P
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