Did the German army use the same uniforms for the whole of World War II?
The German army entered the war in 1939 in high-quality uniforms of thick wool and with a dark-green collar. The leadership spent a lot to ensure that the soldiers appeared shiny and professional with a victory likely to come fast.It was different in 1941 when the invasion of Russia took place. The military was not well prepared to the extreme cold. Guy Sajer in his memoirs describes how the men were forced to wrap their feet in straw or steal clothes off the conquered men just to get by. The catastrophe motivated Germany to prepare heavy reversible winter parkas, white on the outside and gray on the inside, and so on.
By 1944 and 1945 Germany had ran out of resources. The exhausted finances and factories that were bombed altered things. Making jackets shorter saved fabric and pure wool was substituted with inexpensive, scratchy, and thin synthetic mixtures.
Uniforms faded to brown or dark yellow, when green dye was used up. At the conclusion of the war, soldiers did not necessarily look like they had appeared in 1939 anymore; rather than finely-cut equipment, they wore a thin and brownish piece of rags since the country was exhausted and spent all its resources.

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