All SS Divisions wore black before the war started. Additionally, what is a parade helmet doing getting worn into combat. Allgemeine folks only did parades and such. There is a disticntion that I think a lot of helmet collectors are failing to make.
There were no SS divisions before the war started. The Leibstandarte was only a reinforced brigade at the outbreak of war (sources "Die Leibstandarte, volume 1" by Rudolf Lehmann and "Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS 1939-1945" by Tessin). Quoting the staff war diary, the divisional history of Das Reich by Weidinger gives 10 October 1939 as the date from which Division Kempf, regiments Germania and Der Führer and Pionier-Bataillon began assembling to form SS-Verfügungs-Division. The formal date of establishment is given as 19 October 1939.
In a directive referring to the issue of helmet covers dated 1935, the Chef des SS-Hauptamptes ordered that black helmets still in SS stocks were only to be used for parade purposes. Although I can't find a definite date for the introduction of the semi-matt field grey finish, this was most likely used on the 1935 model helmets first issued to the SS-VT from 1936 onwards and these helmets were certainly issued together with black helmets to SS-VT troops at the beginning of the war.
Since the Wehrmacht had control over and priority for equipment supplies at the beginning of the war, the SS-VT used everything it could lay its hands on, including black and field grey helmets, square and triangular grey Zeltbahn shelter quarters (besides those issued in SS camouflage pattern), captured weapons and refurbished Gewehr 98 rifles of WW1 vintage.
/David
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