CHJ9B

CHJ9B

€600.00

SWISS ARMY ALPENFLAGE "PIZZA CAMOU" JACKET - 1990’S / CAMOU ON CAMOU

"Pizza Camouflage" Swiss Army Alpenflage jacket, camou on camou.

Scraps of fabric from prototypes and dead stock, lasered and sewn individually on hood, shoulders and back to recreate the original camouflage effect on which camouflage is based.

Normally we use nature (leaves, branches and land) to camouflage. 

Here we used our left over which thus becomes the main interpreter of the design of this jacket.

Padded orange lining inside embroidered with onion stitch, detachable and wearable individually. 

The hood is detachable and covered with the same fabric offcuts.

MAIN MATERIAL: 50% COTTON, 50% POLYESTER

LINING: 100% NYLON

MADE IN SWITZERLAND

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The Swiss Military TAZ 83 is applied to the Swiss Army Kampfanzug 57/70 ("combat dress") and TAZ 83 (Tarnanzug, i.e. "camouflage dress". It also is known as "Alpenflag" or "pizza camouflage" among collectors of militaria. As military surplus camouflage clothing it came on to the army surplus market in the 1990s. The pattern is based on an experimental all-terrain pattern that saw limited service in World War II by Germany's Waffen-SS and Wehrmacht called Leibermuster.

The Kampfanzug 57/70 is a six-colour camouflage pattern consisting of a tan-coloured background with white random flecks with light green body overprinted with a green, red/reddish brown and black leaf shapes. The choice of red and green would at first glance seem to make this pattern very bright for something intended to conceal, but it works well for FIBUA (fighting in built-up areas) environments and alpine terrain. Swiss soldiers have referred to it as "Vierfrucht-Pyjama", which translates loosely as 'four-colour pyjamas'.

The Kampfanzug 57/70 was issued from 1957 to 1993 (after 1970 with a textile daypack) and the lighter TAZ 83 with different pattern from 1983 to 1993 for non-combat troops, when both dresses were replaced by TAZ 90, a print in colours of green, brown, and black.

Swiss Militärblachen with the TAZ 83 Pattern are still in Use in the Swiss Military along with Militärblachen with a green camo pattern (who is not the same pattern like the TAZ 90).