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xoxoxoBruce 11-27-2019 11:37 PM

Zebra Stripes
 
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A hundred years ago a National Geographic explorer noticed the effect of direction of the Sun and orientation to the viewer has the visibility of Zebra stripes. I would imagine it would be the same with other animal markings, and something artists and illustrators have to deal with constantly.

Carruthers 12-19-2019 09:51 AM

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Warships and Zebras would appear to have little in common except a deep seated desire to avoid the attention of the enemy.

However, if you can't make yourself invisible to the enemy at least you can confuse him.

Attachment 69351

Quote:

At first glance, dazzle seems an unlikely form of camouflage, drawing attention to the ship rather than hiding it.
The approach was developed after Allied navies were unable to develop effective means to hide ships in all weather conditions.
The British zoologist John Graham Kerr proposed the application of camouflage to British warships in the First World War, outlining what he believed to be the applicable principle, disruptive camouflage, in a letter to Winston Churchill in 1914 explaining the goal was to confuse, not to conceal, by disrupting a ship's outline.
Kerr compared the effect to that created by the patterns on a series of land animals, the giraffe, zebra and jaguar.
Attachment 69352

Depiction of how Norman Wilkinson intended dazzle camouflage to cause the enemy to take up poor firing positions.

Link

Gravdigr 12-22-2019 07:31 PM

Quote:

Was boot?


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