Post-WWII polish-type web renovators
Inspired by the Royal Tank Regiment’s use of boot polish to blacken their webbing it was suggested in 1947 to the War Office that this practice should be extended to all units. The method was much less messy and time consuming than the traditional cake of Blanco, a rag and water – and was much more practical in use too, giving both colour and waterproofing as well as being easy to touch up.
The authorities did not take kindly to the idea but the War Office did ask the Ministry of Supply to produce something like boot polish, in the right colours, to take the place of traditional Blanco.
The answer came in an experimental renovator with a wax content which made it not only waterproof by shiny. With camouflage in mind the War Office sent it back with a request that the shine be taken out. As it turned out, this was not entirely possible, and the Army had to accept a certain amount of shine.
Soldiers tested the new renovator in the Ministry of Supply’s Clothing and Stores Testing Establishment at Chatham and it had world-wide troop-trials in 1951 and 1952. A number of proprietary cleaners were also tried out but none was found as good as that produced by the Ministry of Supply.
NAAFI has now been asked to arrange for a manufacturer to produce the Army’s renovator, and it will be sold exclusively by NAAFI. It may cost the soldier slightly more to treat his equipment the first time with the new renovator that it did with Blanco. Afterwards, however, it should be cheaper to keep the equipment looking smart by retouching. The renovator must be used sparingly to prevent caking.
The renovator can be used on 1944 pattern webbing. This was waterproofed and it was forbidden to use Blanco on it. The new renovator, it was claimed, will improve the waterproof properties of the equipment.
The ousting of Blanco ended the clouds of dust rising from rifle slings when large parades were ordered to present arms and it also meant the end of countless Blanco jokes. The one the manufacturers liked best concerned a Guardsman who staggered into an outpost, after days lost in the desert, gasping, “Water, Water!” He was handed as water-bottle, and croaked, “At last – at last I can Blanco my webbing.”
The Pickering’s new tinned ‘polish’ type renovator was supplied in RAF Blue-Grey in 1954 with the Army being supplied at the end of 1954 in the Army approved colours of KG3, 61, 97 and 103. The trade name of Blanco had gone and was replaced by Pickering’s – the end of an era for sure.
Subsequently products like Quippy and Fleet came to the market as competitors (fairly easy, being established manufacturers of similar product types) but Pickerings and later Properts were the official and approved products. White was never supplied in this form though, as a satisfactory form couldn’t be produced, so the age old cake was retained along with more liquid bottled and tubed products.
Still, in the form of noun-turned-verb Blanco retained it’s place in Army life as squaddies busily ‘blancoed’ their webbing. Well, ‘polishing’ or ‘renovating’ your webbing just doesn’t sound right!
Written by David Pratt