WW1 experimental camouflage sniper’s suit using the concept of “dazzle.” Dazzle camouflage, also known as razzle dazzle (in the U.S.) or dazzle painting, was a family of ship camouflage used extensively in World War I.

  • @EdibleFriend
    link
    English
    896 months ago

    See, you guys are stupid. They’re going to be looking for army guys.

  • katy ✨
    link
    fedilink
    English
    486 months ago

    they’re just lucky the world was black and white back then so it’s easier for him to blend in

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    47
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    I thought the idea of dazzle was to obscure your direction and shape for targeting torpedos and large guns with a long flight time. It seems like it’d be less than useless where you don’t need to account for the motion of the target like on a person.

    • @FireRetardant
      link
      English
      246 months ago

      Are you saying you can’t snipe with a bolt action while sprinting?

      • Deconceptualist
        link
        fedilink
        English
        12
        edit-2
        6 months ago

        Yeah for real you gotta score a running 360 noscope to unlock the dazzle camo skin, everybody knows that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      136 months ago

      It works well for zebras, who travel in herds. Their stripe pattern, similar to dazzle, makes it difficult to differentiate individuals from the group and isolate a single one. For an army in marching formation, or otherwise on the move in a group, it could serve to make it difficult to tell exactly how many soldiers are in your group. But it isn’t going to work as classic “camo”, of course, nobody is going to not see you.

      • @AnUnusualRelic
        link
        English
        86 months ago

        A herd of snipers does sound kind of worrying to be honest.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        76 months ago

        Zebras have the advantage of having colorblind predators. It may dazzle you, but to a lion, Zebras are grass colored and grass patterned.

        • @jaybone
          link
          English
          56 months ago

          There is a rare genetic mutation that creates a zebra without stripes. It’s rare because they don’t often survive. When the lion attacks the herd, the zebras all scatter and run everywhere, in different directions. Because of their camouflage, the lion cannot tell one zebra from another, therefore cannot focus on a single target, and eventually becomes tired out.

          With the stripeless zebra, the lion can focus on one individual. This is easier for the lion to hunt.

        • @BluesF
          link
          English
          26 months ago

          Looks aren’t colourblind, they can see blue and green, just not red.

    • @CheeseNoodle
      link
      English
      96 months ago

      Camouflage is weird and there are some unintuative ways to do it.
      -Blend in: classic camouflage
      -Breaking up your silhouette: Can actually be aided by bright colours, bad once spotted but makes you harder to spot initially because you don’t look like the shape the other persons brain is trying to recognize.
      -Fake silhouette: Blend in part of your silhouette while making a deliberately visible fake silhouette of something else inside it, similar to the above making the other person skip over you by messing with the brains pattern recognition.
      -Pixel weirdness: I don’t know the details on this one but at certain scales/distances an inconsistent but very distinctly geometric pattern can make you very hard to spot because our brains don’t innately associate that kind of pattern with either people or the environment and for some reason tend to react by filtering it out entierly.

      • SSTFOP
        link
        English
        26 months ago

        Pixels, as is my understanding are simply a convenient way to design and produce camouflage with good macro/micro patterning.

        Macro/micro patterning are basically the differences in distance the camo best works at. Classic US Woodland for example is a very “macro” pattern by design. It works better further away in a fairly wide variance of terrains because the shapes are very large which breaks up the human shape. Micro patterning would be an extremely dense pattern made up entirely of smaller shapes. This is great for close distance, but at longer ranges creates a “blobbing” problem where the pattern is perceived as one color essentially.

        Pixelized patterns can create layers where you have a macro shape, and then inside the micro is enough variation to break it up for micro distances without losing the macro visibility.

        You don’t actually need pixels to do this, but it’s become common especially with many patterns building off of early widely adopted designs.

        There’s, uh, a lot more but I lost what the point of this comment was.

      • @jaybone
        link
        English
        26 months ago

        My camo is drippin.

    • kase
      link
      English
      56 months ago

      A moment later:

    • Subverb
      link
      English
      46 months ago

      I get that reference.

        • @CrayonRosary
          link
          English
          86 months ago

          A zebra’s stripes keep flies away. It messes with the fly’s brain and they can’t navigate properly to land on the zebra.

  • @rockSlayer
    link
    English
    96 months ago

    is there more info about this as troop camo? Admittedly I didn’t look very hard, but the only things I could find were references to naval ships and planes.

    • SSTFOP
      link
      English
      56 months ago

      None I could find. I’d have posted if I had. I presume it didn’t work as well on people for obvious reasons.

  • @someguy3
    link
    English
    46 months ago

    So how well did it work? I can’t imagine it working well when it’s on land, distances are less, you know the size of humans, speed and heading are not factors, anything else?