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Tiger Stripe Camouflage
The term tiger stripe refers to the family of camouflage designs orignially manufactured for use in Southeast Asia (particularly the Republic of Vietnam) during the 1960s, and which were heavily influenced by the earlier French tenue du leopard or lizard design of the 1950s. The term additionally refers to the multitude of derivatives produced by a wide number of nations well into the present period. French camouflage uniforms were in fact supplied to Colonial Vietnamese personnel during the First Indochina War, particularly to airborne and commando units. The Vietnamese referred to these different designs as Sọc Răn (striped uniform). The term tiger stripe (or tiger pattern) no doubt refers to the rudimentary similarity between the narrow brush strokes of the camouflage design and the naturally occurring hide design of the genus Panthera tigris. Although the original, Vietnam War era uniforms were primarily worn by elite units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, Republic of Vietnam Navy, the Republic of Vietnam Air Force, and a number of allied units, nearly all of the fabrics and many of the uniforms themselves were, in fact, produced in neighboring Asian countries, such as Japan (including Okinawa), South Korea, the Republic of China (Taiwan), and Thailand.
South Vietnamese Tiger Stripe Camouflage Patterns
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