Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - darker-bronze-toned (and I deem 'Buntmetall'-based!) N.S.D.A.P.-related day-badge (ie. 'tinnie') being a maker- (ie. 'Glaser & Sohn'-) marked example that is entitled: 'Deutsch die Saar' Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - darker-bronze-toned (and I deem 'Buntmetall'-based!) N.S.D.A.P.-related day-badge (ie. 'tinnie') being a maker- (ie. 'Glaser & Sohn'-) marked example that is entitled: 'Deutsch die Saar'

Attractive - and luxuriously-styled! - darker-bronze-toned (and I deem 'Buntmetall'-based!) N.S.D.A.P.-related day-badge (ie. 'tinnie') being a maker- (ie. 'Glaser & Sohn'-) marked example that is entitled: 'Deutsch die Saar'

This is an attractive - and with certainty not that often found! - darker-bronze-toned (and I deem 'Buntmetall'-based!) N.S.D.A.P.-related day-badge (ie. 'tinnie') being a clearly maker- (ie. 'Glaser & Sohn - Dresden'-) marked example that is simply entitled: 'Deutsch die Saar' and that comes in an overall nice- (albeit surely issued ie. moderately worn-), condition. The detailed and/or pronounced badge - which is executed in darker bronze-toned metal (ie. I deem 'Buntmetall') - shows great detail and was almost certainly never cleaned nor polished (it is still a bit dirty ie. stained). The square-shaped piece shows three upright-positioned hands holding a broken chain coupled with the above-mentioned text. The badge - which shows a clearly-present makers'-designation as stated above - comes naturally mounted onto its (functional) pin-/catch set-up. Simply a neat - and most certainly not that often encountered! - N.S.D.A.P.-related 'tinnie' that was issued to commemorate the annexation of the Saar that took place in the year 1935!

Code: 61190