Wednesday, May 01, 2024

A Kissel Military Highway Scout Kar stops at Multnomah Falls in 1918.


"This camouflaged "Military Highway Scout Kar" was built by Kissel Motor Car Company of Wisconsin; the camouflage was painted to honor the company's work supplying vehicles to several countries in WWI. The car in this form was a promotional vehicle, and toured the west coast promoting the company and their cars."

Below, Imbued by Hues



America's first camouflaged automobile has been let loose, and is now on the war path. The inhabitants of the Pacific Coast from Seattle to San Diego swear they are "seeing things." A sheriff who has a record for pinching speeders is out after the camoufleurs who committed "camouflage" to prove that America's automobiles are as chameleon-like while on the war path as those in Europe. -- Oakland Tribune, Oct. 28, 1917





In an issue of the Oakland Tribune ("Artist Are to Paint Motors, Plan 'Camouflage Carriages'," September 2, 1917, p. 32), it was stated that the three "prominent artists" on the Kissel Kar camouflage committee were architect Arthur Brown Jr, and artists [Ernest] Bruce Nelson and A. Sheldon Pennoyer. They were chairman, assistant chairman, and secretary, respectively, of the American Camouflage Western Division, as reported in "San Francisco Architects and Artists as Camoufleurs" in The Architect and Engineer of California (Vol 1 No 2, August 1917, p. 58).

https://dailytimewaster.blogspot.com/2024/05/multnomah-falls-pnw.html
https://www.facebook.com/larzandersonautomuseum/photos/a.425611211921/10157187699076922/?type=3
which is a blog about everything in camoflage, seriously, EVERYTHING and not the simple hunting camo, also war ships, cities to avoid being spotted by airplanes bombing them, hollywood art director choices for advertising, a horse to look like a Zebra so it wouldn't get stolen... railguns, 

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