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Scale Model Shop
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Completed...'In the Woods'....Brush Painted 'Disc Camo' Stug IV with schurzen.
Very nice Ron. Is this a sort of digital camouflage, the sort of thing image recognising software has trouble with ?
I don't think so to be honest. That type of camouflage wasn't invented until much later, when image recognition software was developed. There weren't even any computers around at WWII unless we talk about the very first electro-mechanical computers that were built in order to speed up Enigma cracking in the UK. Imaging processing computers didn't arrive until the 80's, but they were pretty much useless until the late 90's - and those ones are pretty primitive compared to the things we're doing today.
I've worked with face recognition and I know how to fool such software, but it's a cat & mouse game because it's easy to fix, and a new method for fooling the software is made and so on and so forth.
But camouflage to optically fool people have been used since WWI and the disc camo is just one of the more "artistic" ones. How effective and widespread it was back in WWII I've got no clue. I think it was referred to as "ambush camouflage" or something like that?!
It is though very artistic and cool looking - and Ron has really pulled it off with just a brush!
p.s. Big ships had some sort of large scale camouflage early on to fool the operators that looked at aerial photographs and similar, or is this just my imagination? I'm not really into warships so I don't know their history...
Correct Jens. This pattern was indeed called Ambush Camouflage and as Ron's pictures show, it was rather effective.
Some ships had deception camo. The Bow painted in a lighter colour, a false bow wave painted on the hull, Some even had the stern treated the same way. On a dark night, through a periscope the rather large war ship could be mistaken for a smaller ship.
Razzle camo was designed to confuse the watcher and make it hard to calculate range. Also had an effect of making identifying harder.
I digress.
Ron. Great job and a nice touch with the base for it. It shows it off very well.
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