Our Small Drummer Nutcracker Figurines are 10 inches tall. The Nutcracker Drummer is wearing a tall, black velvet, hat with gold braid swagged across the front with a white feather plum in the center, just above the braid and a gold, glittered brim. The Nutcracker Drummer Costume consists of a Christmas red, flock coat with 6 gold metal buttons on each side of the front of the coat and a strand of gold braid connecting each pair of buttons, gold trim around the waist, hem, shoulders and cuffs, blue and gold shoulder pads and a gold glitter collar. The Nutcracker Drummer also has white pants with stripes of gold and blue just before they tuck into black boots with gold tops. The Small Drummer Nutcracker Figurines are playing a red and blue drum with gold top and bottom and gold drum sticks.
Select this link to view our wooden nutcracker toy soldiers.
The End of Bright Colours.
Until 1914 the majority of armies still provided colourful dress uniforms for all ranks, at least for parade and off duty wear. These often retained distinctive features from the past. Most Russian troops for example wore the very dark green introduced by Peter the Great in 1700. German infantry generally wore the dark Prussian blue of the previous two centuries. Bavarians wore light blue while two regiments of the Prussian Guard were still issued with the brass mitre caps of the eighteenth century grenadier. The British retained their scarlet tunics for parade and "walking out" wear while the bulk of French regiments wore red trousers with dark or light blue tunics. The infantry of the Austro-Hungarian Empire discarded their historic white tunics in 1868 in favour of dark blue. Retained, however, were the extremely large number, of colours appearing on collars, cuffs and shoulder straps to distinguish the various regiments. There were for example ten shades of red, ranging from cherry red to pink. The Swedish Army had favoured dark blue with yellow facings since the beginning of the eighteenth century. There was infinite variety, even within smaller armies, between regiments, branches or ranks and the subject is a very complex one. However by 1914 drab colours were increasingly being adopted for active service and ordinary duty wear. The British had worn khaki drill in India and Africa since the Indian Mutiny of1857. A darker version was adopted for home service field wear in 1902, the same year that the US Army also adopted khaki for non-dress occasions. The Italians introduced grey-green in 1909, followed by the German and Austrian armies who adopted different shades of grey. The Russians had changed to a grey shade of khaki in 1908, following their experience in the Russo Japanese War of 1905. There was however strong attachment to the colourful uniforms as previously worn on all occasions and the process was not an inexorable one. The Danish Army adopted grey-green uniforms for all occasions in 1903, reverted to a combination of dark and light blue in 1910, took up light grey in 1915 and finally settled for khaki in 1923. The Imperial Russian armies following their adoption of khaki-grey field uniforms in 1908, took the opportunity to upgrade their parade uniforms to much more elaborate and colourful styles, and were experimenting with a mix of khaki and bright colours when war broke out in 1914. The Japanese Army probably went further than most in adopting khaki for all occasions after 1905, although even here officers and the Cavalry of the Imperial Guard retained traditional coloured uniforms for formal and ceremonial occasions.
Select this link to view our lifesize nutcrackers.
Regimental Dress.
The styles and decoration of military uniforms varied immensely with the status, image and funds of the military throughout the ages. Uniform dress became the norm with the adoption of regimental systems, initially by the French Army in the mid seventeenth century. Some Swedish infantry had been issued with standard coloured dress under Gustavus Adophus. However in the main the levies of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries wore civilian dress with scarves, pieces of foliage or other makeshift identification. Even Royal guards would only be issued with surcoats to wear over ordinary clothing.
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