Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and (I deem) early-period 'Buntmetall'-based example as was produced by a (by me) unidentified maker Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and (I deem) early-period 'Buntmetall'-based example as was produced by a (by me) unidentified maker Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and (I deem) early-period 'Buntmetall'-based example as was produced by a (by me) unidentified maker

Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and (I deem) early-period 'Buntmetall'-based example as was produced by a (by me) unidentified maker

The truly attractive - and luxuriously styled! - silver-class wound-badge (or: 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber') is executed in neat and/or just somewhat tarnished, so-called: 'versilbertes Buntmetall' and does show some obvious usage and/or wear (as can be seen on the pictures). The badge - which is naturally non-magnetic - comes mounted onto its fully functional (thin-shaped- and totally unaltered) pin (which is of course fully functional) and comes mounted onto its functional and dito pristine catch (as can be seen on the pictures). The badge is most certainly never cleaned and retains truly most of its period-applied silver-toned finish. It is - as stated above - a non-marked example that is I deem an early-period- (and truly quality-procuded!) piece that was produced by a (by me) unidentified maker. Simply an attractive - and with certainty desirable! - early-war-period, silver-class WB that is priced according to its overall nice- and/or untouched, condition!

Code: 58527