Ho trovato questa cravatta in un negozio dell’usato in Canada e ho pensato che fosse una bella cravatta. A quanto pare viene dal KLPD. Non riesco a trovare nessuna immagine. Qualcuno ne sa qualcosa?
Più o meno il titolo. Non riesco letteralmente a trovare nulla di questa cravatta. Le ricerche inverse di immagini e la ricerca su Google generale sono risultate vuote.
Only thing I know is that’s the police emblem. Probably from an old uniform or something
hhhhhhuuuuuuffff on
The original owner was part of the detective unit.
MrmarioRBLX on
That symbol is the one used by the Dutch Police
TheSteelFactory on
The “recherche” : investigators.
Most time without tie, so maybe for some kind of official manager.
Trebaxus99 on
KLPD stands for “Korps Landelijke Politiediensten”. This unit existed between 1993 and 2013 until it was restructured and become a unit in the National Police. It was operating nation wide and internationally and the text “recherche” indicates it’s the investigative branch.
Dutch police. The ” inscription” is in dutch language too. Klpd is an abbreviation of Korps Landelijke politiediensten.
-Marrick- on
Cool, I wonder how it ended up there.
ItsMeishi on
Kinda interesting. Gotta wonder if this was part of any official uniform at any point (in which case I expected it to be returned upon retiring), or if it was a (parting)gift making this tie unofficial.
The more wild but still plausible is criminals copying the uniform and this tie was part of it.
pinkleftsock on
Its the logo of the dutch police force, KLPD is short for Korps Landelijke Politie Diensten. It translates to Corps for national police services.
So this was probably part of older formal police attire, I live in The Netherlands but i’ve never seen one before so it was probably not part of the street uniforms.
andersoortigeik on
It says: “divisie recherche” which means that it’s from the investigative/detective branche of the police. But I’m not familiar enough with the structure of police departments in the Netherlands to say any more.
VivaHollanda on
Must be old, KLPD doesn’t exist anymore. And Dienst Nationale Recherche ended before that.
Timely-Platform-4599 on
Yeah that’s the dutch police tie
pongauer on
The good old days when you got shit work presents you threw in the closet and never looked back at.
gabrielo0 on
The logo is still in use and therefore I wonder if it’s actually legal for non-police people to wear it in the Netherlands.
Forsaken-Program-450 on
I think this was part of an old police uniform. A ceremonial one, or one belonging to an officer behind the counter.
TempusFrangit on
It’s an old Dutch police tie as others have stated, but the logo is still current. It is also a protected logo, which means that you can only wear it (on clothing or otherwise) if you are part of the Dutch police or have been granted express permission (e.g., for a movie shoot). My suggestion is not to wear the tie when in the Netherlands despite the logo being relatively small.
Electronic-Tree-9715 on
Probably a promotional gift from a Dutch police official to a Canadian counterpart.
21 commenti
Korps Landelijke PolitieDiensten.
Police tie.
That’s the [logo ](https://www.google.com/search?num=10&newwindow=1&client=firefox-b-d&hs=LecU&sca_esv=e2532f7e453b1d7f&sxsrf=ANbL-n7wrfHrx6U06f4rlvLxUcsJrwPPNg:1770196624134&udm=2&fbs=ADc_l-aJPaNUgmyF6N6eJt5nMLWwePQO1r9vTOIHYuaMLa3xuwsf2ALiJ-SVfUURqWoEQeCzcH3OlsLK876FVp-I6jIMx4Th5upW9SqvW8fPdZe-Uj4vCjEwrXv3i4gGrEx4L2soXDOXI70-y_ZDXMERfrfLOHF3BsgLL2-rw6HVHcQT0eeXp695VkdeA2xNctBEe6PUIBh3&q=logo+politie&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwid9tqnwL-SAxWw9wIHHS20LlYQtKgLegQIFBAB&biw=1440&bih=656&dpr=1.33&aic=0)for the Netherlands Police detective department, which used to be a seperate division of the national police force but is now integrated. So this tie is from before 2013.
Only thing I know is that’s the police emblem. Probably from an old uniform or something
The original owner was part of the detective unit.
That symbol is the one used by the Dutch Police
The “recherche” : investigators.
Most time without tie, so maybe for some kind of official manager.
KLPD stands for “Korps Landelijke Politiediensten”. This unit existed between 1993 and 2013 until it was restructured and become a unit in the National Police. It was operating nation wide and internationally and the text “recherche” indicates it’s the investigative branch.
The logo is still current for the Dutch police.
[https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dienst_Landelijke_Recherche](https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dienst_Landelijke_Recherche)
Dutch police. The ” inscription” is in dutch language too. Klpd is an abbreviation of Korps Landelijke politiediensten.
Cool, I wonder how it ended up there.
Kinda interesting. Gotta wonder if this was part of any official uniform at any point (in which case I expected it to be returned upon retiring), or if it was a (parting)gift making this tie unofficial.
The more wild but still plausible is criminals copying the uniform and this tie was part of it.
Its the logo of the dutch police force, KLPD is short for Korps Landelijke Politie Diensten. It translates to Corps for national police services.
So this was probably part of older formal police attire, I live in The Netherlands but i’ve never seen one before so it was probably not part of the street uniforms.
It says: “divisie recherche” which means that it’s from the investigative/detective branche of the police. But I’m not familiar enough with the structure of police departments in the Netherlands to say any more.
Must be old, KLPD doesn’t exist anymore. And Dienst Nationale Recherche ended before that.
Yeah that’s the dutch police tie
The good old days when you got shit work presents you threw in the closet and never looked back at.
The logo is still in use and therefore I wonder if it’s actually legal for non-police people to wear it in the Netherlands.
I think this was part of an old police uniform. A ceremonial one, or one belonging to an officer behind the counter.
It’s an old Dutch police tie as others have stated, but the logo is still current. It is also a protected logo, which means that you can only wear it (on clothing or otherwise) if you are part of the Dutch police or have been granted express permission (e.g., for a movie shoot). My suggestion is not to wear the tie when in the Netherlands despite the logo being relatively small.
Probably a promotional gift from a Dutch police official to a Canadian counterpart.
Nice find
This tie was used by undercover detectives…..
/s