by Steve » Fri Jun 18, 2010 11:41 am
+1 to both the camo in toothpaste tubes and to baby wipes for removal.
The objective with face paint is to break up the recognizeable features of the face. Typically, the nose and chin and cheekbones all protrude, whereas the cheeks and eye sockets are recessed. The forehead is a flattish plane. Dark colors generally applied to the higher areas to subdue them and brighter colors applied to sunken areas to heighten them will change the features to let you blend in. With the three-color paint sets, typical use wil be to use black to flatten out features, green to raise them, and brown as a breakup color to remove symmettry by applying squiggles, lines, and dots.
Alternatively, face paint has historically been used by multiple cultures as a form of psychological warfare. Symbols, designs, and colors were all employed to bolster the morale of the wearers and intimidate their foes.
In more modern times, face paint has been used more to blend the facial coloration into the colors and patterns found in both nature and on the uniform. The goal (aside from concealment) is to dehumanize the appearance of the wearer so that the enemy is confronted with a faceless, inhuman foe. One of the only things that (IMHO) ACUpat uniforms and gear do really well is to remove the individual characteristics of body shape, age, hair color and gender so that the wearers appear to be identical cogs in an unstoppable war machine.
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