Reference: 15212
Brand: Polska
Button type "Canadian", 30 mm, DIYP
Plastic button "Canadian". Sewn with the tape for widths 10 mm.
Reference: 15212
Brand: Polska
Plastic button "Canadian". Sewn with the tape for widths 10 mm.
Reference: 16994
Brand: Polska
Load-bearing tape to the battle set, pouches and other military and tourist equipment. Made from immune on of wiping, causing to pill and weather conditions of the polyamide.
Reference: 14565
Brand: Polska
Beams to epaulettes of non-commissioned officers, nickel-plated. Version for coats.
Reference: 10104
Brand: ZSRR i Rosja
Original cloth strap for weapon. Used for russian guns: AKM, AK-74, SVD, PK/PKM etc. Version from USSR, in olive-sand shade.
Reference: 17761
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, the so-called "six-rivets".
Reference: 17530
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, the so-called "six-rivets".
Reference: 17762
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, the so-called "six-rivets".
Reference: 17893
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, produced until the late 1960s. The so-called ‘six-rivets’. Manufactured in 1960 at the Stalingrad Tractor Factory. Size 1.
Reference: 15484
Guidon "Marshal of the Ground Forces" - in the shape of the enlarged epaulette. For the hanging to the wall or the special stand to the table. Embroidered.
Reference: 17446
A replica of a standard Soviet shovel. Made in Ukraine in Kharkov, from 2mm thick steel. Fully usable shovel.
Reference: 17555
A standard early (1950s) belt buckle for sailors and soldiers of the Soviet Navy. Made of metal and painted with grey paint. Used with field belts.
Reference: 18041
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, produced until the late 1960s. The so-called ‘six-rivets’. Manufactured in 1955 at the Stalingrad Tractor Factory. Modernised in the 1960s-70s by the use of leather fascia straps. Thanks to this modernisation, mainly intended for Motorised Infantry, the helmet held better on the head.
Reference: 17606
Soviet helmet introduced in 1940, the so-called "six-rivets".
Reference: 14764
Soviet coin minted in 1977 to celebrate XXII Olympic Games in Moscow in 1980.
Reference: 10951
Soviet goggles used by motorcyclists, motorised infantry, tank drivers, airmen and other services who needed eye protection from dust and dirt. Robust metal frame and soft padding to distribute pressure evenly.