Camo blog
Read about the latest PenCott® news and more…
Read about the latest PenCott® news and more…
KITANICA was originally founded in 1995 in Brooklyn, NY by master designer, sewer and pattern maker Beej Cronin. The company is now located near San Francisco, CA and Beej, his brother Chris and their cousin Len produce a growing range of exceptionally durable, distinctive, utilitarian, and comfortable clothing for tactical and outdoor use. And if you’re a fan of Mythbusters and/or Tac TV you might well have seen Adam Savage and/or Larry Vickers wearing one of KITANICA’s creations on-screen.
KITANICA are also kind of noteworthy for keeping their color options basic – just black, olive drab and khaki – apart from a limited trial with MultiCam, KITANICA don’t really “do” camouflage. So we felt pretty special when they told us that they are fans of PenCott, and that they’d decided to do a prototype of their new Mountain Shorts in our PenCott-Sandstorm pattern.
The Sandstorm Mountain Shorts are made from our milspec 50/50 NyCo ripstop fabric that’s printed for us by Duro Industries (as are all of our other fabrics), and they include a multitude of practical features. KITANICA even very kindly sent this pair to our Marketing Director, Lawrence, for evaluation and feedback – so we can attest that this design is a real winner. As you can see from the overview below, these shorts have a multitude of ergonomically-placed, no-snag, pockets that allow you to carry loads of different items comfortably and conveniently.
Please contact KITANICA directly for further information about the planned availability of their Mountain Shorts, and/or any of their other products in PenCott camouflage.
All of the recent chatter about the US Army’s camouflage problems seems to have kicked off some discussion in Singapore about the Singapore Armed Forces introduction of a family of pixelated camouflage patterns. The most recent article appeared in The New Paper on Monday of this week.
The New Paper is Singapore’s second largest English-language newspaper (online and offline) and they contacted our Marketing Director, Lawrence, for some help in putting a piece together.
Unfortunately, the article is somewhat marred by repeating the misinformation that the US Army is ditching its current pixelated camouflage uniform for a non-digital design – in fact, only one pattern family in the short-listed candidates for the US Army’s next generation camouflage pattern is not digital, and the Army has not yet made any decision about a new camouflage pattern or patterns.
What the paper wanted from us was a quick and easy layman’s answer to the question of how is camouflage designed. They also asked for some info about patterns (historical-to-modern) that have influenced a lot of other designs. The latter part didn’t make the editorial review apparently though, so we’ve included it here:
A few patterns have had a tremendous amount of influence on the choice of camouflage pattern used by other countries:
French “lizard” pattern – Initially employed by French paratroopers in the Algerian and Indo-China conflicts of the 1950’s, “lizard” pattern inspired the famous Vietnamese “tiger stripe” camouflage and has been copied or used by many countries across Europe, South America, South-East Asia and Africa.
Click on the image below to view a PDF of the published article.
Camouflage pattern images courtesy of Camopedia: The Camouflage Encyclopedia.
Its kind of funny sometimes how a story that’s old news in the industry gets picked up by the mainstream media and takes off with a whole new life of its own.
Such was the case recently when our Marketing Director, Lawrence Holsworth, interviewed for an article about the US Army’s choice of the so-called “Universal Camouflage Pattern” that appeared online in The Daily.
Much to everyone’s surprise, this article sparked a wave of articles published around the world – virtually all of which quoted extensively from The Daily’s article, and most of which also contained a lot of wrong or mixed-up information.
But the fall-out wasn’t restricted to the online or newspaper media, Lawrence was also contacted by the FOX Business Network to appear on one of the their TV programmes. Click on the image below to watch the result…