UBB.threads
Gentlemen,
when Vic and I had written our book, we had so many period photos, we were not able to publish them all in the book. Therefore we both decided to show them all through our website www.germannavydaggers.com. Still under costruction and far from being complete we have a few added. I would like to hear the thoughts of the fellow members here regarding the general idea and the arrangement and resolution of these pics. We will add more when time permits, and of course we will introduce the website here when finished. All these photos are rare and a little bit special. For example: You will not see an Imperial LONG naval dagger for sea-officers in wear, exactly in the length which was regulated. Most of these officers carried shorter daggers. Also water protection police with a dagger is hard to obtain.
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance;
Flyingdutchman
Great pics. I HOPE TO SEE MORE.
The site is coming along nicely and the pics are very good. Not to mention is very fact filled. As you guys fill it with more info and pics I'm sure you'll be rearanging and modifying your categories.
Well done. I'm never disappointed in the work you & Vic do.
Dear Hermann, my friend.

I`m shure your site will become the same quality like your and Vic`s book.
There are some wearing pics online who are more then scarce. My favorite is "little Erika"!

regards
Sven
Hi,
thanks for your nice comments! On another test site we have added a dagger, described in the same way as we did in our book.

Please have a look:

http://www.germanautoandaeroco...ebensburg-dolch.html

Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Thanks for looking.
Best;
Flyingdutchman
This Rebenburg dagger is a good one to look at. This particular dagger comes from Northern Europe and was bought and returned by a US collector to the seller as the buyer was not sure of the piece. I certainly applaude returning pieces you are not sure of. There are so many navy variations it is difficult to know. Hands on inspection does reveal a very nice and rare Navy variation. I am only aware of three of these particular daggers world wide. A beautiful damascus blade in the Imperial Eickhorn pattern is always nice to see.

The approach that Hermann and I are pursuing both in our book and website is to provide quality pictures of period examples. If you look at enough good ones, then the bad ones will give you the feeling of "Cognitive Dissonance", that feeling you get when something is wrong. Sometimes you are not even sure of what is wrong but you know it is something. When you get that feeling it is the first sign to walk away.

One little thing to look at on navy daggers you encounter is so simple but often neglected; look at the suspension eyes and rings. Navy daggers were made to be worn, sometimes you encounter eyes that are so poorly done that the dagger would never hang correctly. I have seen a group of new Imperial Scabbards that are extra Fancy on the body, but fail completely at the eye.
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