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Pioner in Normandie
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Originally posted by Adam S. View PostSnow pants?
Tropical canister?
Luftwaffe blue?
(often worn by engineers often seen during the Blitzkrieg, so early impression)
Tropical canister = actually ordnance tan colored canister = OK (not necessaeily tropical,instead its a base color, as used on vehicles, which could be camoflaged,
as often seen during the Normandy campaign)
Luftwaffe Blue gas cape pouch I agree on... indeed better would have been WH green one instead!
Nice display!
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Originally posted by NickG View PostSnow pants = drillich pants, fatigue white HBT, totally possible us substiture warm weather garment!!!
(often worn by engineers often seen during the Blitzkrieg, so early impression)
Tropical canister = actually ordnance tan colored canister = OK (not necessaeily tropical,instead its a base color, as used on vehicles, which could be camoflaged,
as often seen during the Normandy campaign)
Luftwaffe Blue gas cape pouch I agree on... indeed better would have been WH green one instead!
Nice display!
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Actually they are more 'off-white' (natural coloured), not really white... When freshly issued, these early type Drillich trousers are more of a beige colour, they tend to bleach after wearing and washing.
Seen on numerous photos of WH soldiers in training in France, but also in combat, even in 1944. Although by then most Drillich sets where issued in the well-known 'reed-green' colour, ocasionally white trousers can still be seen.
This display can also be influenced by an article in Militaria Magazine, where a display of a Normandy fighter was shown with these trousers. Doc 29 is French, so he must have based his choice on MM, the monthly 'bible' for hundreds of European collectors... The early Drillich trousers are also the cheapest WH trousers around, so...
As I am specialized in the 1940 fighting, I looked for proof of the use of these Drillich trousers in combat. There are only a few photographs that show these in the spring of 1940, when WH combat dress regulations where a lot stricter than in 1944. NickG is right when he states that Pioniere used this (e.g. the men who stormed Eben-Emael head-on, the 51st Pi Btn), also some front-line troops in the same sector of Maastricht/ Albert canal.
Early Drillich trousers can still be found in mint, un-issued condition. Probably left-overs from stocks of uniform clothing, obsolete by the end of the war.
Lucius
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