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Pink is an excellent desert camouflage color and has been used in desert camouflage since at least World War I. The color was used by the British Light Car Patrols during World War I. It was then adopted by the Long Range Desert Group and the British Special Air Service during World War II. The British continue to use pink for desert camouflage today. It has also a camouflage color that has been adopted by other Special Forces units.
Pink was also used as one of the colors used in the dazzle camouflage used on Navy ships during the World Wars. The color was effective at breaking up the ships out line at dawn and sunset and made it much harder to see the ships in periods of low light (such as full moon or overcast nights.)
What I've always thought was kind of silly is the notion that if you make a knife pink it is somehow going to be more appealing to women. I find that more sexist than the thought a man isn't going to buy a knife because it is pink.
My Pink Izula with Black LRDG beret.
I have no problem with a pink knife.
I carry that pink Spyderco, wife didn't like it. Pink as a feminine color is a fairly modern notion, coming in about the 40's. I see nothing wrong with pink anything, it just gets dirty faster. The flip side, I don't see anything wrong with a girl wanting a big honking black tactical knife.
Now I like that analogy Doug. I have a good friend and she drives a 4X4 F150. People are always surprised by that, bet you get the same subtle reaction to carrying a pink knife
Touche, Tobias...lol
From the Wikipedia:
[Pink] happens to be one of least popular colors. According to surveys in Europe and the United States, pink was the favorite color of only two-percent of respondents, compared with forty-five-percent who chose blue. It was the least-favorite color of seventeen percent of respondents; the only color more disliked was brown, with twenty percent. There was a notable difference between men and women; three percent of women chose pink as their favorite color, compared with less than one percent of men. Many of the men surveyed were unable to even identify pink correctly, confusing it with mauve. Pink was also more popular with older people than younger; twenty-five percent of women under twenty-five called pink their least favorite color, compared with only eight percent of women over fifty. Twenty-nine percent of men under the age of twenty-five said pink was their least favorite color, compared with eight percent of men over fifty. (Eva Heller, Psychologie de la couleur - effets et symboliques, p. 179.)
So it would seem that the research makes it pretty clear that women are not going to be more inclined to buy a knife simply because it is pink. I also doubt that a female who is not inclined to carry a knife is going to change that inclination simply because the knife is pink.
As for me, I don't actively collect pink knives but if it fills out a collection or if it supports a cause that I agree with, or if someone is willing to give me one, I will definitely buy/take it. So if anyone has a pink knife they don't want feel free to send it my way. As for my favorite color -- well that would be:
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