Your Badge Vendor Is Lying to You About Art Fees
There are seven specific ridges on the wing of the eagle crowning the steel die sitting on my desk. They are microscopic, barely a fraction of a millimeter deep, yet they represent the threshold between a generic piece of hardware and a symbol of authority. The die, which weighs roughly four pounds and feels like a cold anchor in the palm, is the physical ghost of a design choice made decades ago.
It is a heavy, stubborn thing, and it serves as a reminder that in the world of law enforcement, details aren’t just aesthetic preferences; they are the vocabulary of the uniform. I spent the better part of this morning looking at this die through a jeweler’s loupe.
I was looking for a flaw, a tiny deviation in the “Rockwell C hardness” of the steel that might explain why certain lines were blurring during the striking process. It reminded me of a session I taught last week-I moonlight as an origami instructor, a hobby that demands a level of geometric honesty most people find exhausting-where a student struggled with a sink-fold on a piece of handmade washi.