No, the Confederates primarily wore gray uniforms during the American Civil War. While there were variations and some units wore different colors, blue was typically associated with the Union army. Some Confederate troops might have worn blue due to lack of resources or captured uniforms, but gray was the standard.
Confederate-Gray Union-Blue
The men on the confederate army wre gray clothes, and the union wore blue
Confederate soldiers primarily wore gray uniforms, not blue or red. However, some units did use other colors, including but not limited to butternut, which could appear brownish. The Union soldiers, on the other hand, predominantly wore blue uniforms.
the varied between blue gray and tan. sometimes it was just whatever you had to wear when they couldn't get supplies fast enough
its like a lighter version of navy blue. Take the normal dark blue and add gray and you will pretty much have confederate blue.
Confederate soilders wore gray or yellowish-brown uniforms.
Confederate uniforms were grey. The Union Army wore dark blue.
blue
We cant wear confederate flags to school because it shows racistism!
Blue
The Confederates (south) wore gray and a color called Butternut, and the Union (north) wore a blue-gray more blue then gray type of uniform.
The confederate soldiers (of the new Confederacy of the United States) wore grey uniforms versus the union soldiers who wore blue uniforms.