FRENCH BROWN LEATHER DOUBLE MAS CARTRIDGE POUCH USED
In stock
- SKU
- 91365000
- Color
- Brown
- Style
- Magazine, Pouch
Description
Genuine French military-issue leather cartridge pouches are a staple of any serious surplus, collector, or reenactor inventory — and this double MAS cartridge pouch is the real article, originally produced in France to carry magazines for the MAS-49/56 service rifle. Built from heavy brown bridle leather and finished with brass-toned post studs, it carries the unmistakable look and feel of mid-20th-century French issue gear.
Each pouch holds a single 10-round MAS magazine in its own dedicated cell, with a sculpted leather tab that locks down over a stud closure to keep the contents secure during movement. A pair of belt loops on the reverse threads onto a standard field belt, and a center D-ring at the top gives the option of running a strap or lanyard for additional retention. The pouch also accepts other magazines and small kit up to 3.25" wide, making it a flexible carrier for collectors who run period-correct loadouts or shooters who want a rugged leather mag rig.
Who It Sells To
- MAS-49/56 owners and Cold War-era French rifle shooters
- Militaria collectors building authentic French postwar kit
- Reenactors portraying French Army, Foreign Legion, or Indochina/Algeria-era troops
- Surplus shoppers who prefer real-issue leather over modern nylon
Key Features
- Origin: Made in France, original French military issue
- Pattern: MAS-49/56 double cartridge pouch, 1950s–1970s production era
- Construction: Brown leather body with heavy stitched seams
- Closure: Two sculpted flap tabs secured by post studs
- Capacity: Two pouches, each fitting magazines up to 3.25" wide
- Carry: Double belt loops on the rear plus a top center D-ring for strap or lanyard attachment
- Overall dimensions: 8.5" × 5" × 2"
Condition
Used surplus. Expect honest storage marks, light scuffs, and minor variation in leather color and patina from piece to piece — the kind of character that confirms these are genuine issued items rather than later production. Hardware and stitching remain serviceable for display, reenactment, and field use.