Frog Skin Camouflage
One of the earliest military camouflage patterns ever issued, Frog Skin was developed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 1940 and marked the beginning of modern concealment design. Officially known as “camouflage 1942 pattern,” it quickly earned the nickname "Frog Skin" due to its distinctive, mottled appearance.
Frog Skin gained prominence with U.S. Marines in the Pacific during WWII, where reversible uniforms featured a five-colour jungle pattern on one side and a three-colour beach variant on the other — offering concealment across both tropical interiors and coastal terrain. It was also briefly fielded in Europe, including during the early stages of the D-Day invasion by elements of the 2nd Armored Division.
Though its service life was short, Frog Skin’s influence endures — a standout among heritage patterns and a nod to the early innovation that shaped today’s battlefield camouflage.
Historic. Distinctive. The original disruptor.