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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.]
Italian three-colour camouflage (1st pattern)
Kingdom of Italy
Although wartime German camouflage patterns have been extensively documented, wartime Italian camouflage patterns remain largely overlooked. It is frequently claimed that only one camouflage pattern — usually designated M29 telo mimetico ('camouflage cloth') — was used by Italy during World War 2. Nonetheless, the evidence to hand suggests that at least three quite different camouflage patterns were used by Italian forces during the Second World War.
Some authors have noted at least six distinct colour variations for wartime telo mimetico, and the moderate yellowish brown, greyish olive and greyish brown colouration shown here is definitely one of them, inasmuch as this particular example was scanned from a piece of shelter-half that has been dated to World War 2. It is an example of first pattern camouflage, which was the basis for the second pattern.
Apart from the manufacture of jump smocks for Italian parachutists after 1937, the Italian Royal Army (Italian: Regio Esercito) principally used telo mimetico for the production of camouflaged shelter-halves. After 23 September 1943, though, Italian three-colour camouflage was used by military formations of the Italian Social Republic (Italian: Repubblica Sociale Italiana, RSI) for a much wider variety of garments.
I have found no evidence for the use of this camouflage pattern after 1945.
kamouflage.net is grateful to Lorenzo Russo, for his invaluable contributions to this article.
camouflage data
Italian three-colour camouflage (1st pattern)
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