Truly luxuriously-styled, 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and typical 'Buntmetall'-based example as was (I deem) produced by the desirable maker: 'Hauptmünzamt Wien' Truly luxuriously-styled, 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and typical 'Buntmetall'-based example as was (I deem) produced by the desirable maker: 'Hauptmünzamt Wien' Truly luxuriously-styled, 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and typical 'Buntmetall'-based example as was (I deem) produced by the desirable maker: 'Hauptmünzamt Wien'

Truly luxuriously-styled, 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber' being a non-maker-marked- and typical 'Buntmetall'-based example as was (I deem) produced by the desirable maker: 'Hauptmünzamt Wien'

The attractive - truly luxuriously-styled and very pronounced! - silver-class wound-badge (or: 'Verwundeten-Abzeichen in Silber') on offer here is executed in minimally tarnished 'Buntmetall'-based metal and shows obvious (although minimal!) usage and/or wear (as can be seen on the pictures). The badge - which is naturally non-magnetic - comes naturally mounted onto its fully functional (tin-shaped- and totally unaltered) pin (which is of course fully functional) and comes mounted onto its functional and pristine catch. The badge is most certainly never cleaned and truly retains (most of) its silver-toned finish and just shows some obvious tarnish ie. staining (it has, however, never been cleaned nor polished though). It is - as stated above - a non-maker-marked example that can in my opinion be attributed to the Austrian-based maker (ie. 'Hersteller') named the: 'Hauptmünzamt Wien' (ie. 'Hersteller': '30') as was based in the town of Wien (ie. 'Vienna'). Simply a neat, early-war-period- and fully untouched, silver-class WB that is I deem accordingly priced!

Code: 70558

SOLD