Christian Hecht wrote:
Nice to see that the last remnants of the former "radical religious" movement were eliminated.
Many thanks Scott!
I'm so bold to make a little criticizing comment(what is necessary or Scott thinks he is done and we all know we can't let that happen

), looking over the army pages the background colors represent the army the British get their red, the Austrians their white and so on, so the green of the main page reminds me strongly of the Russians(to be honest this greens fits better than the brighter one on the Russian army pages) and although I like it because this dark green color emanates dignity I wonder if there is a more fitting(neutral) color we could use, is there any color left that isn't connected to an army and that still looks good?
Lol thanks Christian....
Yes comments are welcome as I am truly never done, as you so well point out....
To answer your question, green actually transcends all sides of the conflict. Yes it can mean Russian, btw I didn't design the Russian site, but I kept it as it looked nice & just did some minor changes to it. But green is heavily used on Napoleon's side too. Afterall he did often wear a green uniform of the Guard's Chasseurs à Cheval (who had green uniforms) with his token white pants. (Excuse my laymen's terms, I am a bit tried this morning) But take a look at many of the famous paintings:
Édouard Detaille:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... n_1806.PNGJacques-Louis David:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... leries.jpgJean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... sonier.jpgJust to name a few. Green was used in Napoleon's own personal space & dwellings too. So it is very French Empire Style trendy, I assure you.
It also fits into uniformology for almost every force out there. Somewhere & often in full dress unforms there is green. So it was a color of most, er um....égalité if not fraternité....
