Eric Stahlhut Posted February 27, 2009 Author Posted February 27, 2009 packet is lined with linen/cheesecloth at seams
Eric Stahlhut Posted February 27, 2009 Author Posted February 27, 2009 paper is extremely brittle and delicate...very dessicated
gregM Posted February 27, 2009 Posted February 27, 2009 Is the core painted ?I am thinking a very late piece. It has a 1914 look to it.
Eric Stahlhut Posted February 27, 2009 Author Posted February 27, 2009 yep, core is painted. i'm scared to handle this one too often. it's the maker that is interesting
VtwinVince Posted February 27, 2009 Posted February 27, 2009 Very interesting, looks to be an 1830-40 period piece.
Tim Tezer Posted February 27, 2009 Posted February 27, 2009 Very interesting, looks to be an 1830-40 period piece.Hmmm.... maybe more like 1930-1940.
Schießplatzmeister Posted February 27, 2009 Posted February 27, 2009 Hello folks:This to me looks like a 1914 EKII core and frame. The core was probably altered on the Crown/"W"/"1914" side. The ribbon also looks like a WWI-era ribbon. The envelope (if not a counterfeit itself) could be for any piece of jewelry.I would stay away from this one!Best regards,"SPM"
gregM Posted February 27, 2009 Posted February 27, 2009 Hmmm.... maybe more like 1930-1940.I would guess somewhere in between. Maybe 1870-1918.The painted core gives me cause for concern as well as the 1870-1914 style crown.
Elmar Lang Posted March 7, 2009 Posted March 7, 2009 Hello,O would like to try to see the problem in a philological way.The inscription on the paper has a wrong construction: it should be:Rosenthal, JuweliereFriedrich Strasse N?82BerlinOr with "Berlin" above the address. Why should the label of a firm start with the city? I'm very suspicious with that paper.The cross looks late 19th Century, or even later, but a proper answer could be given having the cross in the hands: quite often, a picture isn't enough to judge a piece.Best wishes,Elmar Lang
Stogieman Posted March 7, 2009 Posted March 7, 2009 Interesting Eric... the ribbon and paper seem to have real (and appropriate) wear for a very early piece. The printing (is it actually printed, or hand-written) seems to have contextual issue; but I have seen addresses from makers like this.The cross itself doesn't match any of the above and does not look consistent with any 1813 EK2 I have seen/handled from any period.If it's legit (as that is always possible)... it's a very, very late piece (possibly even 1930+). In which case it wouldn't really match with the paper and/or the ribbon.If you look at the ribbon itself, the wear is quite consistent of ribbon made 1820-1860... the acid eats away and damages the ribbon color exactly as shown...Folding pattern and paper is consistent with how these crosses were packaged. At least from what I have seen.
Kev in Deva Posted March 7, 2009 Posted March 7, 2009 The only addresses I have come across in reverse, are those of the ex-Communist Bloccountries, its a style that still exists in Romania, First the county, town, street, Block, floor, apartment, and then family name. Kevin in Deva. :beer:
Motorhead Posted March 8, 2009 Posted March 8, 2009 I'm late here-sorry! The fat frame......is there a mark on the eye ring? I wouldn't take this one as a "good" '13! For me it looks like a put together.Micha
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