Originally posted by phild
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Killer M44 tunic - found at the Max show
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Originally posted by sander vw View PostI disagree, I'm absolutly sure this is all original.
I was not attemping to come across as some sort of evil monster by casting doubts on your M-44 jacket and I hope that you do not think that but I think you should know the History with this one, so here it goes.
I saw this M-44 tunic 3 or 4 years ago...It had the factory sewn collar tabs still applied but the eagle was removed. If I remember correct the eagle was not sewn through the lining from the factory when it was manufactured,as not all of them were.(most were)
It had the eagle re-applied using threads that were a "close" match to those used in the jackets manufacture..A tan color thread for the front of the eagle and a dark green (to match the button hole thread) used on the reverse (the bobbin thread)
If you examine the attachment threads with a loupe and compare them to the thread used for the button holes and other parts of the jacket you will see what I mean.
A year or so later the collector who owned it consigned to a very reputable dealer with full disclosure as to what was done, and he correctly described it,as it is now.
http://virtualgrenadier.com/sale_item.php?iid=962
So there you have it and I figured this one would end up being sold as "all original" as it is very well done.
With regards
Glenn"A Man's Got to Know His Limitations"
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Originally posted by overthetop View PostIf it was post war sewn, wouldn't there be some sort of previous thread stitching or ghost image from the original?
From the M-44 tunics that I know of and have seen the vast majority of them had the eagle sewn through the lining at the time of manufacture,maybe it was just easier this way or they changed the process of how things were sewn (I have no idea)
But I have also seen a half dozen or so M-44's that the eagle was NOT sewn through the lining at the time of manufacture but rather they were applied before the lining was installed.
I am not sure what percentage were done this way as all we have to go by is what survived out of maybe tens of thousands that were produced. But surviving examples dictate that the vast majority of M-44's had the eagle sewn through the lining at the factory.
On the other side of the coin,the total opposite can be said for earlier tunics...But I have seen five or six M-42 tunics with 1942 dates that had the eagles sewn through the lining at the time of manufacture,there was no doubt that they were originally applied.
But the majority of M-42's that survived shows that the eagle was sewn before the linings went in,the total opposite of what you see on the M-44's.
Anyway,it is something to think about when examining such uniforms.
Glenn"A Man's Got to Know His Limitations"
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Originally posted by Glenn McInnes View PostI was not attemping to come across as some sort of evil monster by casting doubts on your M-44 jacket and I hope that you do not think that but I think you should know the History with this one, so here it goes.
I saw this M-44 tunic 3 or 4 years ago...It had the factory sewn collar tabs still applied but the eagle was removed. If I remember correct the eagle was not sewn through the lining from the factory when it was manufactured,as not all of them were.(most were)
It had the eagle re-applied using threads that were a "close" match to those used in the jackets manufacture..A tan color thread for the front of the eagle and a dark green (to match the button hole thread) used on the reverse (the bobbin thread)
If you examine the attachment threads with a loupe and compare them to the thread used for the button holes and other parts of the jacket you will see what I mean.
A year or so later the collector who owned it consigned to a very reputable dealer with full disclosure as to what was done, and he correctly described it,as it is now.
http://virtualgrenadier.com/sale_item.php?iid=962
So there you have it and I figured this one would end up being sold as "all original" as it is very well done.
With regards
GlennGive a man an opinion and you feed him for a day,
teach a man to use the "search" function on the WAF and you feed him for a lifetime.
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A year or so later the collector who owned it consigned to a very reputable dealer with full disclosure as to what was done, and he correctly described it,as it is now.
http://virtualgrenadier.com/sale_item.php?iid=962
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Originally posted by Maxoumilitaria View PostNice memory to remember where that particular tunic went for sale. Thanks for the info !
I always keep a close eye on that website..
But considering the almost dead silence (crickets) since I posted my comments,maybe I should have just kept my big mouth shut.
Glenn"A Man's Got to Know His Limitations"
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Originally posted by Glenn McInnes View PostI always keep a close eye on that website..
But considering the almost dead silence (crickets) since I posted my comments,maybe I should have just kept my big mouth shut.
Glenn
In fact, there is not a lot more to say.
It is even possible that the seller to Sander vw thought in good faith that this eagle was period applied, except if it is him who bought directly this tunic to Mike Davis.
But at one stage, someone deliberatly lied for sure in purpose to fool.
On another hand, we all made mistakes, including me of course, and i can understand it is sometimes hard to swallow.
But at the end, the truth, despite unpleasant, is always better than a knowing silence.
Just my humble opinion, i have no dog in this race.
derka
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Definitely not, it is the reason people presents and asks question here. And the truth is not always well tolerated.
Hans Kristian
Originally posted by Glenn McInnes View PostI always keep a close eye on that website..
But considering the almost dead silence (crickets) since I posted my comments,maybe I should have just kept my big mouth shut.
Glenn
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Originally posted by Glenn McInnes View PostI always keep a close eye on that website..
But considering the almost dead silence (crickets) since I posted my comments,maybe I should have just kept my big mouth shut.
Glenn
I appreciate your post on this. A first hand knowledge is IMO the only way to know for sure in many cases when it comes to sewn and more so pin on insignia and that was my point on the thread about the M43 tunic last week.
I think that it is human nature that once you witness a "before and after" transformation that we can then say something like the thread is not 100% or the stitching is not quite right, but in truth none of us know what could be replaced in the insignia that we all agree is 100% right and I guess at that point it does not matter.
My feeling about this M44 was that there was nothing that looked like the eagle had to be period sewn (lack of previous holes was convincing, but as Glenn pointed out not always sewn through lining) but on the other hand no dead give aways that it was recent.....at least that I could see in the photo.
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