The Albert County Museum in Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick, Canada is in the process of restoring (not to firing condition but to display condition) a WW1 German k14 105mm Cannon which was captured at Vimy Ridge, April 9, 1917. You can read all about the gun and our restoration project on our website http://www.albertcountymuseum.com/world-war-1-cannons/
We are at the stage where we are researching what colour scheme the cannon would have been painted with, fortunately we have photographs from the 1920's that show the camouflage markings(one photo enclosed), however they are all black and white. I am looking for any help we can get to determine the actual colours that would have been used on the cannon.
Thanks in advance,
Stuart Liptay. President Albert County Historical Society
There's no guarantee that the colours shown in that photo are original, it looks too fresh to me, having been sitting outside for several years.
Article on German artillery colours here. landships.info/landships/artillery_articles.html#
There were no standardised colours to be used for camouflage. What was used was what was at hand, and it was used at the discretion of the crews - or by order of the local commander at maximum. Exhibits still in original colours may give you an idea what was actually used (the Brussels army museum and AWM Canberra have lots of such exhibits). Most museum items, however, seem to have been re-painted at the discretion of the museum staff sometimes during their long life. (All exhibits of the Koblenz collection share the latter fate.) - Basically, until the introduction of the Buntfarben-Anstrich in 1918, you have a grey base colour, which very often (but not always and everywhere) was garnished with dapples of various sizes and colours. Buntfarben then changes to larger areas of green, redbrown and clay-yellow, often separated by black lines, at least according to the OHL order. But again, no exact hues were prescribed and troops used what was at hand.