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I really like the both photographs from post 11. The boys do have their collars "pinned" with a button.
This is very early, as it was also done by the SA before the 1925 re-organization.
Didn't somebody say (Heinrich): "I made it myself and that's good enough for me." That was often done.
I have an early SA order where it is said that cloth could be bought and the woman in the house could
make a brownshirt. In the beginning even insignia were handmade by "mom"!
So, the varying types of brassards with swastika's must be homemade mainly, I think. This was not
forbidden in the earlier years. With about 1931/1932 more strict regulations came into being. Finally
this lead into the "Herstellungsvorschriften der Reichszeugmeisterei" and not even then all what was
manufactured and worn, was according the regulations.
Many photographs do proof this, time and time again!!
This is very early, as it was also done by the SA before the 1925 re-organization.
Didn't somebody say (Heinrich): "I made it myself and that's good enough for me." That was often done.
I have an early SA order where it is said that cloth could be bought and the woman in the house could
make a brownshirt. In the beginning even insignia were handmade by "mom"!
So, the varying types of brassards with swastika's must be homemade mainly, I think. This was not
forbidden in the earlier years. With about 1931/1932 more strict regulations came into being. Finally
this lead into the "Herstellungsvorschriften der Reichszeugmeisterei" and not even then all what was
manufactured and worn, was according the regulations.
Many photographs do proof this, time and time again!!