Badge
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2003.0255.001
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- OBJECT TYPE
- uniform
- DATE
- 2003
- ARTIFACT NUMBER
- 2003.0255.001
- MANUFACTURER
- Unknown
- MODEL
- Forest Service British Columbia
- LOCATION
- Unknown
More Information
General Information
- Serial #
- N/A
- Part Number
- 1
- Total Parts
- 1
- AKA
- shoulder flash
- Patents
- N/A
- General Description
- fabric & embroidery thread
Dimensions
Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.
- Length
- 6.9 cm
- Width
- 5.4 cm
- Height
- N/A
- Thickness
- N/A
- Weight
- N/A
- Diameter
- N/A
- Volume
- N/A
Lexicon
- Group
- Forestry
- Category
- Fire fighting
- Sub-Category
- N/A
Manufacturer
- AKA
- Unknown
- Country
- Unknown
- State/Province
- Unknown
- City
- Unknown
Context
- Country
- Canada
- State/Province
- British Columbia
- Period
- Unknown
- Canada
-
Uniform identification badges used by Canadian forestry and forest fire fighting personnel, specifically of British Columbia. In that province, three person initial attack crews respond first to fire calls & are of four types: Helitack crews exit from a hovering helicopter, Rapattack crews rappel from a helicopter, Parattack crews parachute from a fixed wing aircraft & Firetack ground crews are transported by truck. 20 person unit crews are dispatched to larger fires requiring significant resources to fight them (Ref. 2). This is the insignia of the mainstream Forestry Service (Ref. 3). - Function
-
Identifying patches worn on the uniforms of provincial forestry personnel, affixed to a shirt or jacket. - Technical
-
An example of a machine embroidered fabric badge. For centuries embroidery hand been done by hand, but during the industrial revolution mechanization of the process began. Embroidery machines were designed by 1860, combining in a single machine handloom technology with the existing sewing machine technology, the lock-stitch. The automation was refined in the in the 1970s - early 1980s with automatic, electronically controlled custom embroidered machines developed in Japan. Instead of the instructions being coded on a continuous reel of paper or Mylar(r) tape containing x-y coordinate information in Binary, Fortran or other numeric code to control pantograph movement, the information is now digitized on computer disks. These machines also do the work flat instead of vertically which allows automatic colour changes (Ref. 1). - Area Notes
-
Unknown
Details
- Markings
- embroidered green lettering reading "FOREST SERVICE/ BRITISH COLUMBIA"
- Missing
- complete
- Finish
- white, blue, green, yellow, brown
- Decoration
- blue, green, brown, yellow embroidered mountains, tree, water/ embroidered green edging
CITE THIS OBJECT
If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:
Unknown Manufacturer, Badge, circa 2003, Artifact no. 2003.0255, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2003.0255.001/
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