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    Posted

    I see these periodically, and they sell for exorbitant prices.  Are they genuine?  These images are from around the internet, and the third image shows one under "blacklight" [the "since-it-doesn't-glow-it's-authentic" test].

    9d1640f1f2144fc4a652b425072928f7.jpg

    e1ab102cfe7e41468ea57b8a3f1ea2e0.jpg

    ee028cf54ab44ee8b0e73e2cd103a9b7.jpg

    IMG_5776-1024x768.jpg

    IMG_5777-1024x768.jpg

    MDLIC1B-2.jpg

    MDLIC1B-3.jpg

    Posted

    Here is that picture of my old friend Heinz Altendorf, CO of 7. JG53. I asked him what happened to this jacket, and he was wearing it when he was shot down over the desert late in 1941 and wounded. The medics who treated him cut it to pieces.

    altendorf.jpg

    Posted
    On 21/11/2024 at 18:15, ChrisKelly said:

    I see these periodically, and they sell for exorbitant prices.  Are they genuine?  These images are from around the internet, and the third image shows one under "blacklight" [the "since-it-doesn't-glow-it's-authentic" test].

    9d1640f1f2144fc4a652b425072928f7.jpg

    e1ab102cfe7e41468ea57b8a3f1ea2e0.jpg

    ee028cf54ab44ee8b0e73e2cd103a9b7.jpg

    IMG_5776-1024x768.jpg

    IMG_5777-1024x768.jpg

    MDLIC1B-2.jpg

    MDLIC1B-3.jpg

     

    If by "genuine" you mean that they were officially issued the answer is no.  These cloth Iron Cross were made by, or for, tailors who applied them to uniforms.  Unlike metal Iron Crosses it is impossible to tell if cloth Iron Crosses are authentic.  They were made by a variety of shops and each one is different.  I have one in my collection but only to fill it out.  I could never sell it with certainty that it was actually made during war time.  I used to have a photo of a white backed EK1 on a white tunic.  It looked really good.

    Regards,

    Gordon 

    14 hours ago, VtwinVince said:

    Here is that picture of my old friend Heinz Altendorf, CO of 7. JG53. I asked him what happened to this jacket, and he was wearing it when he was shot down over the desert late in 1941 and wounded. The medics who treated him cut it to pieces.

    altendorf.jpg

     

    Interesting comment on the possibility the EK1 was added to the photo.  I don't remember seeing a leather flight jacket with a cloth EK1 and an EK11 ribbon sewn to it.  Usually they have a metal EK1 and no EK11 ribbon.  That is the way my flight jacket was configured.  Much easier to sew thread loops to a leather jacket than to sew a cloth EK1 to it.  Just my 2 cents worth.

    Regards,

    Gordon

    Posted (edited)

    I always thought it was an anathema to stitch patches on good leather.  There are so many reproductions to-day, many better than the originals from the War.  These EK1s were indeed offered by the cornucopia of "Uniformen-Markt" jewelers, metallurgists and tailors as alternatives to the official issue items, and they were allowed in wear, even if only for stylistic, if not practical purposes.  Perhaps a term better than " authentic" or "original" might be "pre-1945".

    Edited by ChrisKelly

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