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Razzle Dazzle Battleships

During WWI, German U-Boats were alarmingly effective at sinking allied warships and transport vessels alike. But since a ship couldn't exactly be cloaked, Norman Wilkinson, British artist and naval officer, developed another method nicknamed razzle dazzle.

U-Boats were effective but simple—they shot torpedoes, not directly at ships, but where they estimated a ship would end up once the torpedo got there. Razzle dazzle was an artistic countermeasure, less camouflage and more just a highly confusing pattern meant to make judging a ship's direction and size more difficult.

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What you won't see in the lead shot was that these ships weren't just striped—they were covered in an array of colors, as seen in this colorized photo:

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To each his own, but if it's between razzle dazzle and covering my ship in branches and termites, I'm going razzle dazzle. [Twisted Sifter via inspire me now]