kamouflage.net camouflage data
Uncover your potential', indeed! Once you stop ogling the girl, though, you might notice that this Australian Special Air Service (SAS) recruiting poster shows Australian Disruptive Pattern Camouflage to very good effect. [Image courtesy Brad Turner collection.]
1938 amoeba pattern, khaki base
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
The late 1930s saw the Soviets' first attempt to use artificially patterned overgarments to conceal troops in the field.
Two types of camouflaged garment were issued in 1937–1938: a one-piece camouflaged coverall, usually called 'deceptive coveralls' (Russian: маскировочный комбинезон, trans. maskirovochnyy kombinezon, MK); and a two-piece camouflaged suit, commonly called 'deceptive camouflage suit' (Russian: маскировочный камуфлированный костюм, trans. maskirovochnyy kamuflirovannyy kostyum, MKK). Combat engineers, snipers, airborne forces (Russian: Воздушно-десантные войска, trans. Vozdushno-desantnyye voyska, VDV) and reconnaissance units of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (Russian: Народный комиссариат внутренних дел, trans. Narodnyy komissariat vnutrennikh del, NKVD) were the most common recipients of these camouflage garments.
The most common pre-war Soviet camouflage pattern comprises large brown blobs on a pale green background and, for reasons that should be obvious, is known by collectors as 'amoeba pattern' camouflage. Two other major colour variants are known, the first of which has a khaki background colour and the second of which has a deep yellow background colour. Allegedly there was also a double-sided version of the 1938 MK overgarment, which had a reverse side that featured sand-coloured blobs on a grey background.
Although both the 1938 MK and the 1938 MKK were withdrawn from general service not long after World War 2, there is some evidence to suggest that the 1938 MKK is still in use today, by reservists and trainees. The 'amoeba pattern' was an integral part of the 1948 hybrid 'amoeba–stair step' camouflage pattern, and was also the inspiration for the DDR-Russisches Tarnmuster, which was used by the Kasernierte Volkspolizei (German: 'Barracked people's police', KVP) and its successor, the Nationale Volksarmee (German: 'National People's Army', NVA).
camouflage data
1938 amoeba pattern, khaki base
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Союз Советских Социалистических Республик ![]() |
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