FJAG
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
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tomahawk6 said:I liked our tropical worsted tan uniform but I really liked the Canadian tan uniform I saw once online.
https://www.bing.com/images/search?q=canadian+army+tan+uniform+with+gold+rank+insignia+on+sleeves&id=8984958AD8AEF19EF8B240095A458241E63247A7&FORM=IQFRBA
Me too. It was by far my favourite uniform (well next to my AFV crew suits - I especially liked the winter one). The short sleeve shirt summer dress was particularly nice to wear.
garb811 said:No thanks, that thing was brutal. Any amount of moisture would cause the area to immediately darken causing some very interesting visuals, rubbing against absolutely anything would leave a mark, as soon as you sat down, any point where there was bunching of fabric would wrinkle...nope.
My understanding was that a consortium of RSMs had their hackles up because the uniform showed stains like oil from rifles etc. and therefore it led an NCM-led campaign to ashcan them. Funny thing is that there are dozens of armies around the world that wore/wear a similar shade of tan (not to mention our decades of TW uniforms before the busman's suit came into vogue) and were/are able to manage them quite well. The uniform wrinkled a bit more than the Greens because the cloth was a summer-weight one. It was manageable, however. Once we got rid of the tan uniform we all got to spend our summers wearing winter-weight cloth year-round. If you took care of your tans, they looked sharp. :2c:
Dimsum said:Also, the sewn-on badges/ranks/etc were on dark backings like the green DEU. I never understood why they didn't have dark ranks/Canada letters on tan backings.
Not to mention that we wore the green peaked cap, green ties and belts, and black shoes with it as well, all of which were a fashion faux pas. It was a dollars per uniform issue at the time. There simply wasn't enough funding at the time to also buy sets of the proper shades of accoutrements.
:cheers: