Thread: Info needed: ARN stencils- Size and style
View Single Post
  #15  
Old 11-02-20, 11:26
Tony Wheeler's Avatar
Tony Wheeler Tony Wheeler is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Yarra Junction VIC
Posts: 953
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike Cecil View Post
Is it dark blue, or faded black?
Hi Mike,

It's definitely dark blue to the eye but less obvious in photos. I figure the applicators used 2-digit paint for convenience, rather than stock an extra colour Black purely for use as background. Just a guess of course.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike Cecil View Post
Anyway, most Americans don't seem to comprehend that the colour bar/USN system is a British invention
haha...Americans don't like to believe they borrowed from the British. For goodness sake don't mention their flag origins!

Click image for larger version

Name:	East India Trading Company flag  1668-1801 cf. Grand Union Flag 1776.png
Views:	1
Size:	34.1 KB
ID:	111883


Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike Cecil View Post
However, as it is the visual cue that the colored bars provide, rather than the actual number, the difference in colors matched to numbers did not matter anyway. What freight handlers were looking for was a like set of color bars on each package, not the actual unit number.
Excellent point. Thanks for the article, a very interesting and informative read. Just to confuse matters - I found this Life magazine colour photo, one of a series by Robert Capa depicting men of the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion: "most probably taken between December 1942 and June 1943 when the 509th trained in Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco in preparation for the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943." As such it predates the POM-ETO instruction of 21 July 1943, and I notice the USN is four digit with alpha suffix. Is this an earlier system of some kind? Or maybe a separate 'A' for Airborne subsystem?

Cheers,

Tony


Click image for larger version

Name:	US Paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne preparing for a jump, North Africa (2).jpg
Views:	6
Size:	511.6 KB
ID:	111884
__________________
One of the original Australian CMP hunters.
Reply With Quote