Thanks Owen, it would be nice to view an unwashed specimen.
The pinks are only slightly different, as far as we know, but that's no reason to be suspicous, IMO. I'll wager that for every smock deemed original, the other 5 or 10 thousand ones produced at the same time they were would be pretty identical as well. However, the other couple thousand examples were destroyed 1943-1945.
Large quantities of anything produced at the end of the war survived in larger numbers than stuff leading up to 1945, especially if it didn't have immediate post-war use.
I will provide this to the discussion: I have one of the variant smocks under discussion, and it is made just like those pictured. The stitching on the cammo foliage straps glows BRIGHTLY, which is taken to be a bad sign as we know. It has the unmarked HBT pockets.
It's possible the treated fabric resisted the post-war cleaning, while the cotton thread absorbed the cleaning agent. The other option is that the smock was put together post-war, using synthetic thread.
regards, Robert
The pinks are only slightly different, as far as we know, but that's no reason to be suspicous, IMO. I'll wager that for every smock deemed original, the other 5 or 10 thousand ones produced at the same time they were would be pretty identical as well. However, the other couple thousand examples were destroyed 1943-1945.
Large quantities of anything produced at the end of the war survived in larger numbers than stuff leading up to 1945, especially if it didn't have immediate post-war use.
I will provide this to the discussion: I have one of the variant smocks under discussion, and it is made just like those pictured. The stitching on the cammo foliage straps glows BRIGHTLY, which is taken to be a bad sign as we know. It has the unmarked HBT pockets.
It's possible the treated fabric resisted the post-war cleaning, while the cotton thread absorbed the cleaning agent. The other option is that the smock was put together post-war, using synthetic thread.
regards, Robert
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