Hello folks. Here's a nice salty M40 camouflage over-paint that came directly from the son of the WWII vet who "souvenired" it during the war. It's been in the proverbial woodshed for decades, and despite some mouse gnawing to the leather, remains in pretty much UN-touched condition. It's named on the rear apron to a Grenadier. The camouflage paint was very thinly applied (spray), and the decal (Heer) has bled through. I've not quite been able to discern however, the exact color scheme, as in certain light I see "Normandie" colors, but in-hand, and in direct sunlight, it appears to be much more of a tan / mustard "tropical" color w/ a light shade of brown / green. I'd be interested in what the helmet forum members might think of the colors. The helmet is an SE and is complete w/ many years of dust, crud and cob-webs. Appreciate your comments, and thanks for your time!
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TROPICAL or NORMANDIE CAMO From Vet's Son
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Originally posted by Paul.B. View PostHi Milton i think med camo too, mabye the original paint is
showing through thinner areas of the tan making it
seem a different colour in a few places
anyway nice lid
Fred i'd have yours too!
Regards Paul.B.
Thanks Paul, some more pics if you want (this had no success while listed on Estand in nov/dec 2007, jingle bell jingle bell
http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...d.php?t=264278Last edited by Fred S; 02-10-2011, 05:51 AM.
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"tropical" vs Normandy...IMO it is often hard to know for sure w/out vet provenance. Some camo paint tones are clearly from N Africa/Sicily/Italy, but tans and greens were used in France as well. I have camos that I know for a fact came from Normandy that I could probably sell as tropicals...Either way...nice one!
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Originally posted by Milton View PostNICE helmets! Yes, unfortunately the veteran himself is deceased and apparently no one in the family ever thought to ask him from where his souvenir items were acquired. Not surprising, considering these things were doubtless out of sight and mind for years....history lost.
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That's all very true. There probably isn't a single old landfill in the country that doesn't have it's own small population of war memorabilia of ALL sorts. A lot of folks probably come across this stuff whilst cleaning house many years after the fact, and either through ambivalence, or in some cases fear (if weapon related, for example), would rather toss the stuff in the trash heap than contact an outsider to come in and purchase the item(s). ESPECIALLY if they're of the hard-core "pc" mindset....I suppose all of us in the hobby are helping to preserve history and are occasionally lucky enough to "rescue" historical items from an otherwise ignominious fate.
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