I have always been fascinated by all things military, the history, the strategy, the weapons, the tactics, the uniforms, etc. I think it comes from reading the book All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque when I was about 12-13 years old. I still have that exact book and have read it several times. It's in pretty rough shape now but other than Lord of the Rings, is my favourite book. Then when I was 14 my uncle gave me an old WW1 camouflaged German helmet that is quite unique (see pic below) that was in his neighbours barn out in the country where he lived. He helped his neighbor paint the barn and his neighbor had this old helmet he said his grandfather brought back from WW1 and was just collecting dust so he gave it to my uncle when he said his nephew (me) would love it. If I didnt take it he was turning it into a flower pot!
As I was financially able to I jumped into militaria collecting after numerous forays into other collecting fields (record albums, concert and movie posters, military diecast) and went a little nuts, specializing in Stahlhelms and had hundreds of top shelf pieces that I think some of you might now own.
Sold it all back in 2013/14 as I retired from militaria collecting, however after Karel's passing I got back into Imperial German pickelhaubes. Karel and I were good friends and I saw him often in Belgium when I was there visiting my son who moved there years ago as he lived not far from him. Karel found a helmet that was the identical twin to my helmet and I remember he called me from the Boot Sale where he found it as he couldnt believe he was holding the twin to mine in his hands and wanted to talk about it before he bought it! That was a fun call, and we always said we would get the two helmets together as we were 100% positive that they were painted by the same hand on the same day if not the same hour and nobody to this day knows why there is a red band from vent lug to vent lug and believe me I have researched the daylights out of this and after almost 50 years still no definitive answer!
When I retired from militaria collecting I had donated my helmet along with some extremely rare Canadian militaria to our Regimental Museum here as their WW1 stahlhelm example was an interwar fire helmet and my helmet was a vet bringback from a farm just north of here. When I saw that Karel's helmet was for sale in the auction, I was buying it no matter how much it was going to cost me (sorry if I outbid you!) and then decided to buy some of my favourite pieces from his collection as well, and since then I have not stopped. Now the shelves are full again!
So this helmet has brought me into collecting militaria now not once but twice! Mine is the one on the right, Karel's is on the left. I took this photo at the museum of them both together a few years ago, reunited after 110 years! The colors are a perfect match, both are painted camo over camo, something rarely if ever seen, same red band, even the brush strokes match. Both helmets have handwriting in pencil on the inside, both to 3 different soldiers. Mine had the inscription Peronne France 1917 on the inside, presumably by the vet who brought it home to Canada, but who knows.
Anyway thats my story and I am sticking to it! Oh and my wife blames Tony for getting me back into the hobby, our visits out to his place always re-whetted the appetite lol.
PS some have talked about missing Steve, I did not get a chance to get to know him well before his passing, I have the same sentiments expressed here about Karel. Miss our emails, posts and conversations to this day. I often look at his items (I still consider them his) and brings back a great memory. Collecting for me is also about friendships and have made some lifelong friends via the hobby.
View attachment 75982