I've figured it out, after a lot of digging. As hard as I had to search to figure this out, I suppose others would benefit from this:
The standard style applied to ttk.Entry simply doesn't take a fieldbackground option, which would be what changes the colour of the text entry field. The solution is this to create a new element that does respond to the option.
from tkinter import *
from tkinter import ttk
root_window = Tk()
estyle = ttk.Style()
estyle.element_create("plain.field", "from", "clam")
estyle.layout("EntryStyle.TEntry",
[('Entry.plain.field', {'children': [(
'Entry.background', {'children': [(
'Entry.padding', {'children': [(
'Entry.textarea', {'sticky': 'nswe'})],
'sticky': 'nswe'})], 'sticky': 'nswe'})],
'border':'2', 'sticky': 'nswe'})])
estyle.configure("EntryStyle.TEntry",
background="green",
foreground="grey",
fieldbackground="black")
entry_v = StringVar()
entry = ttk.Entry(root_window, style="EntryStyle.TEntry", textvariable=entry_v)
entry.pack(padx=10, pady=10)
Unfortunately, it appears that the only way to change the border colour is to either give it zero border width and nest it in a frame that acts as its border, or to define a new layout item that uses an image as a border.
Additionally, note that the only thing the background controls is the very tiny corner space; if you squint closely, you can see a single pixel of green in each corner.
To use an image as a border, you can do this:
img2 = PhotoImage("entryBorder", data="""
R0lGODlhHQAdAOMNAAAAAAQGCAgLERkfLR0mODBFZTFFZTNIajtTezxTez1XgD5XgU
Fch////////////ywAAAAAHQAdAAAEbHCQg5i9OGt0iFRaKGLKxBgCoK5s6woGc4Cp
a9+AwFQM7ruYn1AVHP6KRhwyaVsyW87nKioFUKXXZ5a5TXaN32FYOD5eqsAzmlX2tZ
XqNZGxYATkgAD9wCjUqgIFMgR1I4YZCx4TCYeGCR0DEQA7""")
oestyle = ttk.Style()
oestyle.element_create("blueborder", "image", "entryBorder",
border=3, sticky="nsew")
oestyle.layout("OEntryStyle.TEntry",
[('Entry.blueborder', {'children': [(
'Entry.padding', {'children': [(
'Entry.textarea', {'sticky': 'nswe'})],
'sticky': 'nswe'})], 'sticky': 'nswe'})])
oestyle.configure("OEntryStyle.TEntry",
background="black",
foreground="grey")
oentry_v = StringVar()
oentry = ttk.Entry(root_window, style="OEntryStyle.TEntry", textvariable=oentry_v)
oentry.pack(padx=10, pady=10)
The string of characters is generated by feeding an image of the borders I want as a gif to
import base64
with open('otherframeBorder.gif', 'rb') as f:
encoded = base64.encodestring(f.read())
print(encoded.decode('latin1'))