is there a army green examples site /pictures

is there a army green examples site /pictures

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Discussion

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,561 posts

176 months

Thursday 7th March
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looking to match this , other than humbrol charts etc is there any sites that show real photos of army /airforce colours over the years , im sure something would be a close match but not sure where to look , and its too heavy to drag down the model shop

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,561 posts

176 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
rc410 from humbrol looks okay so far

Eric Mc

122,273 posts

267 months

Thursday 7th March
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Which army?

steveo3002

Original Poster:

10,561 posts

176 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
erm any /all , the item isnt army just hoping to grab a small tin from a hobby shop

Eric Mc

122,273 posts

267 months

Thursday 7th March
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There are at least 40 shades of green (according to the old song) smile

Any olive drab/khaki/NATO green type colour will probably suffice.

Tamiya do a range of such greens in aerosol cans. Alternatively, they are available in paint pots too.


Jader1973

4,079 posts

202 months

Thursday 7th March
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I’ve got Vallejo and Tamiya “Olive Drab” which are different colours.

So I did a bit of googling - that was a massive rabbit hole and I’m still none the wiser about what colour OD is / was.

100SRV

2,145 posts

244 months

Thursday 7th March
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steveo3002 said:


looking to match this , other than humbrol charts etc is there any sites that show real photos of army /airforce colours over the years , im sure something would be a close match but not sure where to look , and its too heavy to drag down the model shop
Maybe start with a RAL colour chart?

Eric Mc

122,273 posts

267 months

Friday 8th March
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Jader1973 said:
I’ve got Vallejo and Tamiya “Olive Drab” which are different colours.

So I did a bit of googling - that was a massive rabbit hole and I’m still none the wiser about what colour OD is / was.
Different armed forces in different eras have different interpretations of colours.

"Olive Drab" is most commonly associated with USAAF aircraft in World War 2. It was the common upper surface comouflage colour used on fighters and bombers from around 1940 to 1943 after which most front line US Army aircraft were left unpainted apart from an Olive Drab anti-glare panel.

It was a notoroiusly fickle colour in that, when initially applied, was quite dark but which faded rapidly once exposed to sunlight. You can even see different tonal shades on the same aeroplane.







Jader1973

4,079 posts

202 months

Friday 8th March
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Different armed forces in different eras have different interpretations of colours.

"Olive Drab" is most commonly associated with USAAF aircraft in World War 2. It was the common upper surface comouflage colour used on fighters and bombers from around 1940 to 1943 after which most front line US Army aircraft were left unpainted apart from an Olive Drab anti-glare panel.

It was a notoroiusly fickle colour in that, when initially applied, was quite dark but which faded rapidly once exposed to sunlight. You can even see different tonal shades on the same aeroplane.



I didn’t know they used it on aircraft - I’d associate it with all of their WW2 AFVs and soft skin vehicles etc.

As far as I can tell the USAAF colour wasn’t quite the same as the Army colour, and anything mixed in the field wasn’t the same as the original colour anyway.

I guess some shade of browny green is fine, and once it is weathered it doesn’t really matter.

Yertis

18,136 posts

268 months

Friday 8th March
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Eric Mc said:
Different armed forces in different eras have different interpretations of colours.

"Olive Drab" is most commonly associated with USAAF aircraft in World War 2. It was the common upper surface comouflage colour used on fighters and bombers from around 1940 to 1943 after which most front line US Army aircraft were left unpainted apart from an Olive Drab anti-glare panel.

It was a notoroiusly fickle colour in that, when initially applied, was quite dark but which faded rapidly once exposed to sunlight. You can even see different tonal shades on the same aeroplane.



Remember the old Humbrol Enamel 'Olive Drab'? It looked so dark it was almost black. Nothing like how it actually looked on aeroplanes.

Eric Mc

122,273 posts

267 months

Sunday 10th March
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Olive Drab was quite dark when the aircraft rolled out of the factory - but immediately started to fade. Xtracolor/Xtracrylic (and some others) actually produces two versions of the colour - Olive Drab and Faded Olive Drab.








Catweazle

1,218 posts

144 months

Sunday 10th March
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Eric Mc said:
There are at least 40 shades of green (according to the old song) smile
I would like to see someone model that particular motor-car. Although it would require a 'black as your father's hat' undercoat.

Edited by Catweazle on Sunday 10th March 20:34

Eric Mc

122,273 posts

267 months

Monday 11th March
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And Gaelic number plates (technically illegal in Ireland as the font is not compliant).