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Raindrop camo
Raindrop camo









raindrop camo

In 1963, the Czechoslovakia produced its own version of the "rain pattern" with very prominent rain straits over a subtle water-stain underprint, called oblacky.This pattern in turn later influenced the other Warsaw Pact designs. Poland appears to have been the first Warsaw Pact nation to produce a simplified "rain pattern" design, consisting of thin brown rain straits on a field grey background.The South African government even reproduced the pattern for its special forces units, where the pattern earned the nickname "rice fleck." During the 1960s and 1970s when revolutionary movements were most active in Africa, some of these patterns also ended up in the hands of various insurgent organizations. These patterns were later modified and reproduced by the West German Bundeswehr and Border Guards, but the "falling rain" concept - in which the rain straits themselves were isolated as the major feature on a solid color background - emerged out of the Warsaw Pact countries of Eastern Europe. During the Second World War, the German Wehrmacht utilized this feature on several camouflage patterns, primarily the Splittermuster ( splinter) and Sumpfmuster (marsh) designs. 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.











Raindrop camo