If they were tailor made and had WWII era buttons I would not be so skeptical about them or the color but with the removed factory and post War style tag and the French seven size stamps etc my guess is post War.
Early post War military clothing followed very closely and some times exactly to the WWII patterns but differed slightly in color-often this type of brown green or slate grey.
The early Bundeswehr (and other countries) wore a mix of newly made WWII pattern clothing and primarily US WWII/1950s gear. The method used to make clothing in the 50s and into the early 60s were basically the same as late war clothing manufacture so you get the same hardware, same buttons, same stitching etc.
Early post War military clothing followed very closely and some times exactly to the WWII patterns but differed slightly in color-often this type of brown green or slate grey.
The early Bundeswehr (and other countries) wore a mix of newly made WWII pattern clothing and primarily US WWII/1950s gear. The method used to make clothing in the 50s and into the early 60s were basically the same as late war clothing manufacture so you get the same hardware, same buttons, same stitching etc.
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