Phantomfixer
Practically Family
- Messages
- 819
- Location
- Mid East coast USA
"would the paying public really guess that your tunic colour was slightly off?"
99.9 would not notice nor care
99.9 would not notice nor care
But that's not the standard. Many visitors to events know their ****. There's a nice reasonable level. Each group sets it's own. Find one that suits you."would the paying public really guess that your tunic colour was slightly off?"99.9 would not notice nor care
I buy a lot of kit and unforms for display from reenactor vendors and have caught on that there are varying degrees of fideltiy/fanatacism to 'authenticity' among reenactors of every era. Rollin, who is the proprietor of www.atthefront.com has a trove of very funny rants on this subject. Nothing funnier than the experts who persist in their opinions in the face of documented exceptions. It can be a ruthless sub-culture!
Northern Ireland combat boots
In 30 years of collecting I have seen a lot of 20 year old Command Pilots and 17 stone aircrew, some wear moth eaten original clothing some, a miss match of original wartime(whatever era) and various quality repro. The thing is to collect and have fun. If re-enacting means performing for the general public at shows, would the paying public really guess that your tunic colour was slightly off?
John
Hi
I own several pair of Rollin's khaki pants and they're great. I used to be on a now defunct militaria forum and they made Rollin seem sickeningly sweet. They had some excellent pictures of redneck Nazi's, Japanese Nazi's, 450 pound Nazi paratroopers complete with extremely snide comments. The Mullet Nazi was one of my favorites.
Later
I have been re-enacting since the age of 5 and into WW2 re-enacting since I was 18 (I'm 42 now). These days I almost exclusively do display events only, having served in the real US Army (and relaizing that re-enactment tactics are very rarely based on any kind of reality).
I get the original thought in the first post but I have to say I see the flipside of this often. I'm in a very loose organization, the only WW2 re-enactment group that was ever endorsed by WW2 cartoonist Bill Mauldin (we have permission to use the characters and names in our group logo).
We get people all the time with downright comical impressions, people who show up with modern gear, hunting boots and all manners of stuff that wouldn't be good enough in the worst WW2 movie ever made. And almost all of them refuse to improve anything. We'll suggest more correct stuff but in the end, many of them want to stay as they are. They're not a little off, they're WAY off, not even close. And someone that far off from authenticity is not someone we want with us in a public setting as it makes us all look bad. We look the other way for minor stuff (eyeglasses from member who only show up with their vehicles, things like that) and I disagree with some of it, but I get there's a balance to be made if you want people to have fun. But when someone shows up with Carhart work clothes with modern GI patches sewn to them, a carbine with a 30round mag and metal handguards, a vietnam era helmet and camo hunting boots, well, when you suggest what would be correct and they proudly proclaim, "This is good enough," I have had to say, "well, not for us, it isn't."
I'm not saying the original poster is this type of person. i am suggesting maybe the group has seen their share of these types, as well, and don't want to fight that fight again.
Just a thought...
.... He seemed to think that he looked far more authentic, but didn't seem to realise that uniforms issued at the time weren't actually 60 years old.