

COLLECTIBLE WWII ART
The following WWII art prints are now available. All framed prints include guaranteed original signatures. Many of these pieces are exclusively found on the secondary market at significantly higher prices than those offered here, and several have already been professionally framed. All sales are final; however, customer satisfaction is assured.
"Normandy Tiger Hunt"
by Heinz Krebs
Item #-hk-Normandy
A flight of P 51 Mustangs of the 339th FG, under the command of their leading Ace, Francis R. Gerard has started a series of strafing attacks on King Tigers. In the foreground a Königstiger of the 503rd Heavy Tank Battalion is moving at full speed in an attempt to flee the P 51's and to elude the threat of P 47 Thunderbolt fighter bombers, which the Mustangs would have called in as a special anti-tank force.
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"Diamonds In The Sky"
by Heinz Krebs
Item #-HK-diamonds-sky
Adolf Galland, commanding General of all Luftwaffe fighters, and Erich Hartmann, with 352 aerial victories the ace of all fighter aces, fly their Me 109 fighters through the majestic landscape of the Alps. Both are recipients of the very rare decoration; Oak Leaves, Swords, and Diamonds with the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.
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"Descendants of the Red Baron"
by Heinz Krebs
Item #-hk-Descen of Red Baron
1961, the first fighter wing of the new German Federal Luftwaffe, led by the famous Ace of Aces Colonel Erich Hartmann, was named
JG 71 Richthofen after another well-known German fighter ace, the Red Baron Manfred Freiherr von Richthofen.
Here, Erich Hartmann returns from a mission in his JA-111. The nose of Hartmann's F-86 sports the black tulip, his personal emblem throughout World War II. This emblem is carried by all aircraft in his new fighter wing as a sign of loyalty to their boss.
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"Dragons Of Colombert"
by Nicholas Trudgian
Item #-P-DragonsOfColombert
The Luftwaffe fought the Battle of Britain from airfields situated mainly in France,Belgium and Holland,the greatest concentration being in the Pas de Calais,where the distance to the English coast is a mere 22 miles. Nicolas Trudgian's new painting recreates a typical scene as the Me109; of JG3, under the command of Hans von Hahn, and sporting the group's colourful Dragon emblem on their cowlings, scramble from their bas at Colombert, near Calais, heading for the battle front...
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Winter Patrol
By Nicholas Trudgian
Item #-NT-WinterPatrol
Bf109s of JG-52 sweep through a snow covered valley, returning from a mission over the Caucasus Mountains, the highest range in Europe, November 1942.
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"Kings of the Castle"
by Heinz Krebs
Item #-hc-KingsoftheCastle
A flight of four North American P-51 Mustangs of the 352nd FG, led by fighter Ace Capt. William T. Whisner make a low sweep over the picturesque Neuschwanstein castle after a deep penetration mission into the German Alps in the spring of 1945.
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Channel Dash
By Robert Taylor
Item #-RT-Channel Dash
On the morning of 12 February 1942, a German battle fleet passed the Cherbourg peninsula en route to Germany.
The battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, accompanied by the cruiser Prinz Eugen and supporting vessels, departed undetected from the French port of Brest. They undertook a strategic movement—during daylight hours and within close proximity to enemy forces—to reach the Elbe Estuary safely. Their passage required navigation through the Straits of Dover, recognized as one of the most constrained and heavily fortified straits globally.
Success relied heavily on surprise and aerial protection. The responsibility for providing air cover was assigned to General Adolf Galland, one of Hitler’s youngest commanders, utilizing Messerschmitt Me109 aircraft from JG-26.
Robert Taylor's depiction of this pivotal air-sea operation in his renowned work, The Channel Dash, offers a detailed portrayal. Originally created as the inaugural piece of the ‘Galland Trilogy’, it holds personal signatures from Adolf Galland and veterans of Operation Cerberus. It continues to be regarded as one of the most sought-after limited editions published.
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