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USA-based | Salt Lake City, Utah | EST 2016
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ERDL Lowland CAMO Mens Long-Sleeve Rash Guard

Original price $49.00 - Original price $49.00
Original price
$49.00
$49.00 - $49.00
Current price $49.00
Choose a Size

Long-Sleeve Rash Guard

Don’t let sunburn, wind, sand, or other elements ruin your day! This smooth, versatile long-sleeve rash guard protects you while you enjoy sports. It is slim-fitting, with flat, ergonomic seams, and slightly longer than your casual tee for extra comfort and protection.

  • 82% polyester, 18% spandex
  • Very soft four-way stretch fabric
  • Stretches and recovers on the cross and lengthwise grains
  • UPF 50+ protection
  • Comfortable longer body and sleeves
  • Flat seam and coverstitch
Description

Long-Sleeve Rash Guard

Don’t let sunburn, wind, sand, or other elements ruin your day! This smooth, versatile long-sleeve rash guard protects you while you enjoy sports. It is slim-fitting, with flat, ergonomic seams, and slightly longer than your casual tee for extra comfort and protection.

  • 82% polyester, 18% spandex
  • Very soft four-way stretch fabric
  • Stretches and recovers on the cross and lengthwise grains
  • UPF 50+ protection
  • Comfortable longer body and sleeves
  • Flat seam and coverstitch
Production Time

Most CAMO HQ products are made to order and normally require approximately 3–7 business days for production before shipping. Due to a temporary surge in demand and limited production capacity, all-over print products fulfilled from our Latvia facility may currently require 7–9 business days for production. This delay affects only qualifying AOP items produced in Latvia and does not include shipping transit time. Production times are expected to return to normal by early August, depending on order volume.

Pattern History: ERDL

The Engineer Research and Development Laboratory (ERDL) camouflage pattern was developed by the U.S. Army during the late 1940s and 1950s, with final refinements completed by the Engineer Research and Development Laboratory at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. Officially introduced in 1948 for testing and later adopted on a limited scale during the Vietnam War, ERDL featured a four-color woodland design of light green, dark green, brown, and black that provided exceptional concealment in dense jungle terrain. Lightweight ERDL uniforms first saw widespread combat use in the late 1960s with U.S. Army Special Forces, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP) teams, Navy SEALs, Marine Reconnaissance units, and other elite forces operating in Southeast Asia.

ERDL proved so effective that it became the foundation for the U.S. military's next standard camouflage pattern, M81 Woodland, introduced in 1981. By enlarging the ERDL pattern while retaining its proven four-color palette, M81 carried ERDL's legacy into decades of military service. Today, original ERDL uniforms are highly prized by collectors and historians as one of the most influential camouflage patterns ever developed, marking the transition from traditional camouflage designs to the modern era of military concealment.

Read the complete encyclopedia article →