Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
FS 595 code White: n/a Desert sand: 30279 Sand: 30277 Earth yellow: 30257 Earth red: 30117 Field drab: 30118 Earth brown: 30099 Olive drab: 34087 Light green: 34151 Dark green: 34102 Forest green: 34079 Black: 37038
Brown green: RAL 6009: Fir green: Galactica: RAL 6010: Grass green: RAL 6011: Reseda green: RAL 6012: Black green: Until 1994 for some units of the Bundesgrenzschutz [citation needed] RAL 6013: Reed green: RAL 6014: Yellow olive: Until 1984 for vehicles of the German Bundeswehr. [8] Since 1993 for the Swiss army bicycles. [9] RAL 6015: Black ...
The designation came from the U.S. Army's coloring code "Olive Green 107", which was the shade of dark green used on the original cotton version of the uniform. The OG-107 was superseded by the Battle Dress Uniform (BDU) throughout the 1980s, and was also used by several other countries, including ones that received military aid from the United ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... RLM - 80, OLIVGRÜN ( olive-green ) RLM - 81v.1, BRAUNVIOLETT ( brown-violet )
The official model for the military colours was established in 1911 and states that they should measure 120 cm in the hoist by 130 cm in the fly, the field being vertically divided in green and red, with the National coat of arms in the centre, surrounded by two golden olive branches tied by a white scroll containing the motto Esta é a Ditosa ...
The Desert Camouflage Uniform (DCU) is an arid-environment camouflage uniform that was used by the United States Armed Forces from the mid-1990s to the early 2010s. In terms of pattern and textile cut, it is identical to the U.S. military's Battle Dress Uniform (BDU) uniform, but features a three-color desert camouflage pattern of dark brown, pale olive green, and beige, as opposed to the four ...
Olive drab is variously described as a "A brownish-green colour" (Oxford English Dictionary); [5] "a shade of greenish-brown" (Webster's New World Dictionary); [6] "a dark gray-green" (MacMillan English dictionary); "a grayish olive to dark olive brown or olive gray" (American Heritage Dictionary); [7] or "A dull but fairly strong gray-green color" (Collins English Dictionary).
The Kings's colour of Barrell’s Regiment of Foot that was carried at the Battle of Culloden in 1746. National Museum of Scotland, accession number M.1931.299.2 [1]. Prior to 1743, each infantry regiment of the British Army was responsible for the design and quantity of standards carried, often with each company having its own design.