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    Bilco

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    Posts posted by Bilco

    1. Hi Gents,

      Well, I lost out on the bidding for the Cuba vic I showed. It was not of the best quality (!) as the overall photo shows -

      cubaribboned-1.png

      At some time someone has replaced the suspension ring with a smaller one that is a different colour, the ribbon is very odd (possibly the Cuban Order of Military Merit), and it hangs from a strange suspender - it has a safety-pin on the back. If I had secured it I was intending to try to restore it to something like its original condition, with a proper ring and a French ribbon.

      However, what are your views on this sort of thing? Would the 'restored' medal have been worth more or less that it cost as shown - $200? Is this sort of restoration acceptable for the vics? I know from other sections of the Forum that medals are re-ribboned and Imperial German bars with medals missing from the existing ribbons have them replaced with the same type.

      No doubt the price reflects the condition it's in - there was another on the US eBay for about $1200, and UK medal dealers are offering it for £695. Would I have had a worth-while restoration project?

      Bill

    2. Hi Lambert,

      It's interesting that no-one has yet owned up to having seen a Type 1! It raises the possibility that Laslo hadn't either, and was mis-informed about it's suspension.

      I enlarged the section of the photo of the Admiral that you posted to show his medals

      brazilianchest.jpg

      It seems to me that his Victory medal - I think it's the second from the left on his bar - appears to have a thicker suspension than I would expect to see if he had the wire type, so it could be that he has the Type 1.

      It's a shame the French site http://www.medailles...-interalli.html doesn't say where the private collection with the cylinder-type suspension is to be found. It says that it has the Rio Mint marking on the rim so, unless it's a very clever copy, it should be official.

      I guess we need someone to post a photo of a Type 1 so we can see what's what.

      Bill

    3. Hi Gents,

      Laslo says that the Brazilian vic, in both Type 1 and Type 2, has a wire suspension. I've recently come across this French site with pictures if all the Allies vics, and for Brazil it shows one with a cylinder suspension - http://www.medailles1914-1918.fr/bresil-interalli.html

      So, my question - is this a fake, a repro, a French-produced Unofficial type, or what? It has the proper diacritical marks on the C and A of Civilisacao.

      Bill

    4. Many thanks for the comments, gents. It's always good to get a positive reaction to a newly-acquired item!

      Lambert - thanks for the tip about the scanner - I'll give it a try. I envy you getting a Portugal vic - maybe one day.

      Rob - the ribbon is in very good condition, almost new-looking. It's quite short behind the fold, and there is no sign of any holes it it for the pin mounting. Yep - triangles present and correct!

      Bill

    5. I have seen some postings about the marks of various French medal manufacturers on the Forum, but don't recall seeing any mention of the firm of V. Canale, who produced the Official Greek WW1 Victory Medal.

      If anyone can post the information, or point me to where I can find it, I shall be very grateful.

      Bill

    6. I see that medal on e-bay didn't sell. The starting price was £100, which probably didn't help, or maybe people had doubts about it ...

      Just for the sake of completeness I compared the Official Type to my Unofficial Type 1

      GreekViccomparison02.jpg

      There are some detail differences in the rim on obverse and reverse, but the bottom corners of the tablet on the reverse look very similar, and both have those two triangles on the rim of the reverse.

      Bill

    7. Hi Jonathan,

      I can only speak for my own experience. I put the strips into my uniform hat myself - they weren't issue in the RAF, and I suspect the Soviets didn't issue their hats with the strips in already. They would only be fitted if required - I have a Soviet Army visored cap from the 1990s that doesn't have any card strips fitted.

      Bill

    8. Hi Jonathan,

      When I wore uniform hats of this design I put strips of thick card behind the sweatband to make them fit better if they were slightly large. I bought a very up-market straw hat in Italy a few years ago, and the shop-keeper fitted trips of cork sheet behind the band for the same reason. I take a 6 7/8ths hat size, and I can't always find hats to fit!

      Bill

    9. Hi Jim,

      Your're absolutely right - the copy I posted the link to is totally the wrong colour, and should easily be spotted as a fake. It's a bit scary how accurate the casting is, though!

      Greekvictypes-crop.jpg

      I took these photos from the web site of a dealer here in England, Medal-Medaille - http://www.medal-med...&sort=2a&page=2

      The top two sets of obverse/reverse are both said to be Official type, while the bottom set are Unofficial Type 2. The middle medal is the same as the one on e-bay I posted - http://www.ebay.co.u...984.m1438.l2649

      There are differences between the top two sets. On the obverse, the rim is more regular and well-defined on the middle set ; both are wider than the Unofficial. Also, the lower garland in the 3 o'clock is sharper. On the reverse, the rim is again more well-defined in the middle set, more akin to the Unofficial. Also, the bottom corners of the tablet with the names of the combattants are different in each set; on the top set they are thick and merge into the rim, on the middle set they are sharp and distinct, while on the bottom set they are thick and distinct. Another difference between the top two sets is that the ribbed cylinder in the suspension is split in the middle set and not in the top set.

      It seems to me that the top two sets are made from different dies. There are also differences in the colour of the metal of the planchet, though this may be due in part to the lighting under which the photograph was taken. So, are those top two both Official types made from different dies, or is the middle one a Reissue, rather like the French Morlon reissue, which is in a brighter metal, or is the middle one a Reproduction? Or am I getting a bit obsessive about these things?

      Bill

    10. Hi Gents,

      Just for a laugh I enlarged the photo of the top of the reverse of my Greek vic -

      GreekVic02-crop03.jpg

      - and I can convince myself that those marks I keep harping on about are isosceles triangles - and what's more, I seem to see in the right-hand one a letter M. Could it be that they are maker's marks, or the mark of the die sinker?

      Then I found on the dreaded e-bay someone selling a copy of the Official Greek vic - http://www.ebay.co.u...=item43ac8c0175 - and I'm sure I can see on the enlarged photo of the reverse the marks again! It's said to be 'die cast' - I suppose, if you are very good at making a mould from a genuine original, the casting will show every mark ....

      Bill

    11. Hi Lambert,

      Thanks for your posts. I guess your Type 3 is the 'No-O' on the reverse type. This reclassification that you and Jim describe is all new to me. Is it going to be generally recognized?

      The photo you posted also seems to show the marks in the rim of the reverse that I mentioned, and I've been looking at photos of the Greek vic posted in the original Interallied Victory Medals thread, and they all seem to have them, too. Do other members' examples have them?

      I've also been looking at an Official Type (or Type 1) that's offered on e-bay - http://www.ebay.co.u...984.m1438.l2649 - and it seems to have some differences to the reverse from the norm. For a start, I don't think it has the two marks on the rim, but also the tablet bearing the names of the combattants seems to differ at the corners from all the others of this type that I've seen, particularly on the lower right. It has 'Henri NOCQ' on the obverse in the correct position. I'd welcome any comments on this.

      Bill

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