A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » Aviation Images » Aviation Photos
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

To Stand Out, the Army Picks a New Uniform With a World War II Look - UNIFORMS-older 3-articleLarge.jpg ...



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old May 7th 19, 11:49 PM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Miloch
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,291
Default To Stand Out, the Army Picks a New Uniform With a World War II Look - UNIFORMS-older 3-articleLarge.jpg ...

more at https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html

By Dave Philipps
May 5, 2019

The United States Army wanted a spiffy new service uniform, one that would stand
out in a tough recruiting environment and polish the Army’s image after a
generation of grinding and divisive wars.

So it turned the clock back. Way back.

It chose a new uniform that looks almost exactly like the old green gabardine
wool field coat and khaki trousers that officers wore in World War II. Probably
not by coincidence, that’s what the Army was wearing the last time the nation
celebrated total victory in a major war.

[Sign up for the weekly At War newsletter to receive articles about duty,
conflict and consequence.]

“We went back and asked, when is the most prominent time when the Army’s service
to our nation was universally recognized, and the answer came very quickly,”
said Daniel A. Dailey, the sergeant major of the Army, the highest-ranking
enlisted soldier in the service. “That victory, that impact on the nation, is
still felt today by the sons and daughters and grandsons and granddaughters of
the ‘Greatest Generation.’”

The troops who beat the Axis powers in the 1940s gave the service uniform, with
its slightly rose-hued trousers or skirt and distinctive belted olive coat, an
affectionate nickname: “pinks and greens.” This time around, the Army has
decided to just call them Army Greens.

At a White House event for veterans in April, President Trump praised the style.

“Those beautiful new uniforms with the belt — it was a big deal, the belt,” he
said. “And if you think those uniforms were inexpensive, they were very
expensive. They were very. But they wanted it, and we got it.”

Army Greens will be the military equivalent of a business suit, which the Army
largely stopped using during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Just as civilians
have been dressing more casually in professional and social settings, troops
have been wearing camouflage fatigues in situations that used to call for a
jacket and tie, like office work or travel between bases. Even in the Pentagon,
officers spend a good deal of their time in combat boots.

With far fewer troops deployed in combat operations now, though, the Army has
signaled that it wants to get back to the old spit and polish. It is hoping that
reintroducing an iconic service uniform from the days of the Band of Brothers
and Rosie the Riveter will help reframe its public image.

The new service uniform is currently in field tests with a few military bands,
recruiting battalions and other highly visible troops. With Sergeant Major
Dailey overseeing the process, the Army plans to roll out the new uniforms to
all soldiers starting in 2020. Soldiers will even be given the option to buy a
retro-styled leather bomber jacket to go with the uniform.

The Army says that while the new service uniform will cost more than past models
to make, it will also last longer, making it cost-neutral overall.

In recent years, when the Army has wanted to look sharp, troops have been
wearing blue. The current dress uniform (which will be retained for ceremonial
use) includes a dark blue coat with light blue trousers or a skirt — colors
chosen to evoke the Continentals who fought under George Washington and the
Union Army of the Civil War.

If that uniform has not caught your eye, it may be because Army Blues can be
hard to distinguish, not just from similar Navy and Air Force uniforms, but also
from a sea of blue-clad civilians: police officers, firefighters, commercial
pilots, even doormen, said Kenneth O. Preston, who served as sergeant major of
the Army from 2004 to 2011.

“People think you’re a cop,” Mr. Preston said. “They are always stopping you and
asking you for directions.”


more at https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html



*

Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	UNIFORMS-older 3-articleLarge.jpg
Views:	27
Size:	60.8 KB
ID:	115931  Click image for larger version

Name:	UNIFORMS-new 1-articleLarge.jpg
Views:	14
Size:	48.9 KB
ID:	115932  Click image for larger version

Name:	Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was frequently photographed in the Army’s 'pinks and greens'.jpg
Views:	13
Size:	90.7 KB
ID:	115933  
  #2  
Old May 8th 19, 02:57 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Mitchell Holman[_9_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,922
Default To Stand Out, the Army Picks a New Uniform With a World War II Look - UNIFORMS-older 3-articleLarge.jpg ...

Miloch wrote in
:

more at
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html

By Dave Philipps
May 5, 2019

The United States Army wanted a spiffy new service uniform, one that
would stand out in a tough recruiting environment and polish the
Army’s image after a generation of grinding and divisive wars.

So it turned the clock back. Way back.

It chose a new uniform that looks almost exactly like the old green
gabardine wool field coat and khaki trousers that officers wore in
World War II. Probably not by coincidence, that’s what the Army was
wearing the last time the nation celebrated total victory in a major
war.

[Sign up for the weekly At War newsletter to receive articles about
duty, conflict and consequence.]

“We went back and asked, when is the most prominent time when the
Army’s service to our nation was universally recognized, and the
answer came very quickly,” said Daniel A. Dailey, the sergeant major
of the Army, the highest-ranking enlisted soldier in the service.
“That victory, that impact on the nation, is still felt today by the
sons and daughters and grandsons and granddaughters of the ‘Greatest
Generation.’”

The troops who beat the Axis powers in the 1940s gave the service
uniform, with its slightly rose-hued trousers or skirt and distinctive
belted olive coat, an affectionate nickname: “pinks and greens.” This
time around, the Army has decided to just call them Army Greens.

At a White House event for veterans in April, President Trump praised
the style.

“Those beautiful new uniforms with the belt — it was a big deal, the
belt,” he said. “And if you think those uniforms were inexpensive,
they were very expensive. They were very. But they wanted it, and we
got it.”

Army Greens will be the military equivalent of a business suit, which
the Army largely stopped using during the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Just as civilians have been dressing more casually in
professional and social settings, troops have been wearing camouflage
fatigues in situations that used to call for a jacket and tie, like
office work or travel between bases. Even in the Pentagon, officers
spend a good deal of their time in combat boots.

With far fewer troops deployed in combat operations now, though, the
Army has signaled that it wants to get back to the old spit and
polish. It is hoping that reintroducing an iconic service uniform from
the days of the Band of Brothers and Rosie the Riveter will help
reframe its public image.

The new service uniform is currently in field tests with a few
military bands, recruiting battalions and other highly visible troops.
With Sergeant Major Dailey overseeing the process, the Army plans to
roll out the new uniforms to all soldiers starting in 2020. Soldiers
will even be given the option to buy a retro-styled leather bomber
jacket to go with the uniform.

The Army says that while the new service uniform will cost more than
past models to make, it will also last longer, making it cost-neutral
overall.

In recent years, when the Army has wanted to look sharp, troops have
been wearing blue. The current dress uniform (which will be retained
for ceremonial use) includes a dark blue coat with light blue trousers
or a skirt — colors chosen to evoke the Continentals who fought under
George Washington and the Union Army of the Civil War.

If that uniform has not caught your eye, it may be because Army Blues
can be hard to distinguish, not just from similar Navy and Air Force
uniforms, but also from a sea of blue-clad civilians: police officers,
firefighters, commercial pilots, even doormen, said Kenneth O.
Preston, who served as sergeant major of the Army from 2004 to 2011.

“People think you’re a cop,” Mr. Preston said. “They are always
stopping you and asking you for directions.”


more at
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html



I would prefer getting back to the old
combat helmet and not the current very Nazi
looking one.












Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	Germans.jpg
Views:	12
Size:	193.4 KB
ID:	115944  Click image for larger version

Name:	Marines.jpg
Views:	8
Size:	83.3 KB
ID:	115945  
  #3  
Old May 8th 19, 03:19 AM posted to alt.binaries.pictures.aviation
Miloch
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24,291
Default To Stand Out, the Army Picks a New Uniform With a World War II Look - UNIFORMS-older 3 - Vintage-1968s-Vietnam-Era-US-Army-Khaki-Tan-_1.jpg

In article , Mitchell Holman
says...

Miloch wrote in
:

more at
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html

By Dave Philipps
May 5, 2019

The United States Army wanted a spiffy new service uniform, one that
would stand out in a tough recruiting environment and polish the
Army’s image after a generation of grinding and divisive wars.

So it turned the clock back. Way back.

It chose a new uniform that looks almost exactly like the old green
gabardine wool field coat and khaki trousers that officers wore in
World War II. Probably not by coincidence, that’s what the Army was
wearing the last time the nation celebrated total victory in a major
war.

[Sign up for the weekly At War newsletter to receive articles about
duty, conflict and consequence.]

“We went back and asked, when is the most prominent time when the
Army’s service to our nation was universally recognized, and the
answer came very quickly,” said Daniel A. Dailey, the sergeant major
of the Army, the highest-ranking enlisted soldier in the service.
“That victory, that impact on the nation, is still felt today by the
sons and daughters and grandsons and granddaughters of the ‘Greatest
Generation.’”

The troops who beat the Axis powers in the 1940s gave the service
uniform, with its slightly rose-hued trousers or skirt and distinctive
belted olive coat, an affectionate nickname: “pinks and greens.” This
time around, the Army has decided to just call them Army Greens.

At a White House event for veterans in April, President Trump praised
the style.

“Those beautiful new uniforms with the belt — it was a big deal, the
belt,” he said. “And if you think those uniforms were inexpensive,
they were very expensive. They were very. But they wanted it, and we
got it.”

Army Greens will be the military equivalent of a business suit, which
the Army largely stopped using during the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Just as civilians have been dressing more casually in
professional and social settings, troops have been wearing camouflage
fatigues in situations that used to call for a jacket and tie, like
office work or travel between bases. Even in the Pentagon, officers
spend a good deal of their time in combat boots.

With far fewer troops deployed in combat operations now, though, the
Army has signaled that it wants to get back to the old spit and
polish. It is hoping that reintroducing an iconic service uniform from
the days of the Band of Brothers and Rosie the Riveter will help
reframe its public image.

The new service uniform is currently in field tests with a few
military bands, recruiting battalions and other highly visible troops.
With Sergeant Major Dailey overseeing the process, the Army plans to
roll out the new uniforms to all soldiers starting in 2020. Soldiers
will even be given the option to buy a retro-styled leather bomber
jacket to go with the uniform.

The Army says that while the new service uniform will cost more than
past models to make, it will also last longer, making it cost-neutral
overall.

In recent years, when the Army has wanted to look sharp, troops have
been wearing blue. The current dress uniform (which will be retained
for ceremonial use) includes a dark blue coat with light blue trousers
or a skirt — colors chosen to evoke the Continentals who fought under
George Washington and the Union Army of the Civil War.

If that uniform has not caught your eye, it may be because Army Blues
can be hard to distinguish, not just from similar Navy and Air Force
uniforms, but also from a sea of blue-clad civilians: police officers,
firefighters, commercial pilots, even doormen, said Kenneth O.
Preston, who served as sergeant major of the Army from 2004 to 2011.

“People think you’re a cop,” Mr. Preston said. “They are always
stopping you and asking you for directions.”


more at
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/05/u...s-uniform.html



I would prefer getting back to the old
combat helmet and not the current very Nazi
looking one.


I'm of the generation who wore khakis...in the summer months and the Class A
'greens' in the winter months.

As someone on flight status, I also wore a nomex flight suit.



*



Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	Vintage-1968s-Vietnam-Era-US-Army-Khaki-Tan-_1.jpg
Views:	12
Size:	26.0 KB
ID:	115946  
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Black Hole Picture Revealed for the First Time - BLACKHOLEPHOTO-articleLarge-v3.jpg ... Miloch Aviation Photos 0 April 10th 19 03:37 PM
Cockpits...WWI [03/16] - Army Chaplains World War 1.jpg (1/1) Miloch Aviation Photos 0 June 21st 16 05:09 PM
Private Pilot Uniforms Frank[_11_] Owning 42 January 14th 08 08:58 PM
Army Picks Firescout Eric Moore Military Aviation 7 October 26th 03 03:20 PM
FS: WWII Army Aircorps Uniform TJ Aviation Marketplace 0 July 29th 03 07:21 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:51 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.