Patches & badges are small accessories with a big role in how gear is identified, organised, and personalised. This category covers embroidered patches, rank insignia, keychains, unit-style badges, and hook-and-loop backed identifiers designed for use on uniforms, jackets, plate carriers, backpacks, and admin pouches. Whether you are building a cleaner duty setup, separating training gear from operational equipment, or adding visible role markers to a loadout, patches and badges help create faster recognition and a more structured equipment layout.
In practical use, the right patch is not only decorative. A medical identifier, unit marker, rank tab, or morale patch can help distinguish roles, ownership, or kit purpose at a glance. This makes them useful for collectors, uniformed personnel, airsoft and training users, and anyone refining a tactical or field setup. They pair naturally with equipment from clothing and footwear collections, as well as load-bearing setups such as backpacks and bags and belts and pouches.
How to choose patches and badges
Start with the attachment method. Hook-and-loop backed patches are ideal when you want to swap identifiers between garments and carriers quickly, while sewn or fixed insignia are better for permanent placement. Also check dimensions carefully. A shoulder patch, chest identifier, and pouch marker all need different sizes to remain visible without interfering with zips, straps, or admin panels.
Material and finish matter too. Embroidered designs provide a classic raised look and remain popular for unit-style insignia and morale patches, while tubular or shoulder rank patches are chosen more for uniform compatibility. If the patch will be used outdoors or on frequently handled gear, look for clean edge stitching, stable backing, and legible contrast. Dark-on-dark designs may suit low-profile kits, while brighter colour combinations improve quick recognition.
- Choose by use: identification, rank display, collection, or personalisation.
- Match the backing: hook-and-loop for modular kits, stitched formats for fixed uniforms.
- Check proportions: ensure the patch fits chest panels, sleeves, flap covers, or bag fields.
- Think visibility: high-contrast markings are easier to read in low light or busy environments.
If you are building a fuller field setup, patches often complement equipment in the field gear range and protective wear such as body armor and carriers, where clear external marking helps keep equipment organised and role-specific.