Difference between revisions of "Rain"

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* One of the earliest postwar patterns to incorporate the "rain" design emerged out of [[Czechoslovakia]]; it is based on the German ''Sumpfmuster'' design. Still later (1963) a much more simplified version was produced with very prominent rain straits over a subtle water-stain underprint, called ''oblacky.''
 
* One of the earliest postwar patterns to incorporate the "rain" design emerged out of [[Czechoslovakia]]; it is based on the German ''Sumpfmuster'' design. Still later (1963) a much more simplified version was produced with very prominent rain straits over a subtle water-stain underprint, called ''oblacky.''
  
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* [[Poland]] was probably the first Warsaw Pact nation to produce a simplified "rain pattern" design such the Czech ''oblacky'' pattern, consisting of thin brown rain straits on a field grey background. It is this pattern that is likely to have influenced the other Warsaw Pact designs.
 
* [[Poland]] was probably the first Warsaw Pact nation to produce a simplified "rain pattern" design such the Czech ''oblacky'' pattern, consisting of thin brown rain straits on a field grey background. It is this pattern that is likely to have influenced the other Warsaw Pact designs.
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* [[East Germany]] introduced its own "rain pattern" camouflage, called ''Strichmuster'' (line pattern) in 1965, and continued to issue the pattern until 1990.
 
* [[East Germany]] introduced its own "rain pattern" camouflage, called ''Strichmuster'' (line pattern) in 1965, and continued to issue the pattern until 1990.
  
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Revision as of 16:21, 30 December 2010

The term "rain" pattern refers to a camouflage design that incorporates a heavy percentage of vertically-aligned "straits" or "flecks" which suggest an image of falling rain. During the Second World War, the German Wehrmacht utilized this feature on several camouflage patterns, primarily the Splittermuster (splinter) and Sumpfmuster (marsh) designs. These patterns were later modified and reproduced by the West German Bundeswehr and Border Guards, but the "falling rain" concept also influenced camouflage design in the Warsaw Pact countries of Eastern Europe. Interestingly, quite a number of designs fall into this category, some incoporating only the rain strait design on a solid color background, while others having the feature only as an overprint on top of a much more textured design.

Some patterns in this category have earned other nicknames, including "falling rain," "tan and water" and even "rice fleck."

Rain Pattern Camouflage Designs

  • Some of the original WW2 German camouflage patterns incoporating the "rain" feature are seen here.

Germanytr3.jpg Germanytr7.jpg Germanytr5.jpg

  • One of the earliest postwar patterns to incorporate the "rain" design emerged out of Czechoslovakia; it is based on the German Sumpfmuster design. Still later (1963) a much more simplified version was produced with very prominent rain straits over a subtle water-stain underprint, called oblacky.

Czechoslovakia3.jpg Czechoslovakia5.jpg

  • Poland was probably the first Warsaw Pact nation to produce a simplified "rain pattern" design such the Czech oblacky pattern, consisting of thin brown rain straits on a field grey background. It is this pattern that is likely to have influenced the other Warsaw Pact designs.

Poland1.jpg Poland2.jpg

  • East Germany introduced its own "rain pattern" camouflage, called Strichmuster (line pattern) in 1965, and continued to issue the pattern until 1990.

DDR5.jpg DDR2.jpg


Comp needle patterns.jpg