[QUOTE=Robin Lumsden]
I know embroidered badges were issued right up until the end of the war, but in general terms the SS moved towards Bevo badges was the war progressed (Bevo runic and skull patches coming in in 1943). So why would all the later non-Germanic patches be embroidered??
Could it be that embroidery was easier to produce in the 1960s than woven items??
Robin, I know embroidered badges were issued right up until the end of the war, but in general terms the SS moved towards Bevo badges was the war progressed (Bevo runic and skull patches coming in in 1943). So why would all the later non-Germanic patches be embroidered??
Could it be that embroidery was easier to produce in the 1960s than woven items??
Off the top of my head, the only foreign volunteer collar patch I can think of which was produced in Bevo format was for the 14th 'Galician' Division. All of the others which I have seen - in photos or in person - appear to have been embroidered.
Anyway, it seems to me that the best explanation for the non-use of all of these collar patches by non-Gerrmanic formations was the widespread use of SS runes which, from the evidence of surviving tunics, mostly appear to have been stitched on when the tunics were being manufactured and were presumably issued thus to the foreign volunteer formations.
You are, of course, fully entitled to hold your opinion but you don't seem to have any evidence to back it up, particularly bearing in mind the relatively strong eyewitness evidence which supports the opposite view.
Cheers,
Baz
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