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  1. #1
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    Regional association with jacket cuff styles?

    It struck me today that the three predominant tweed jacket cuff styles all carry place names -- Argyll, Braemar and Crail. Did each style originate at or near those places? Are they worn more often than the others in the areas for which they are named?

  2. #2
    Paul Henry is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    It's nothing other than some manufacturers or retailers picking nice names, or names that they think might sell, and even then they don't always agree with each other!

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    I agree, Paul.

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    It is probably like Eddie Bauer and their Women's Pants Fits. Shaw, Mercer, and Blake are all islands around the greater Seattle area, but that doesn't mean that the women on those islands actually wear that pants with the name of their island.

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    Phil is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    The old-fashioned bespoke tailors each gave their jackets their own names. I have what my tailor calls a Montrose doublet but others would call a Kenmore. The same tailor calls his Montrose-type doublet a Military doublet. The mass-market retailers, however, seem to have settled on a fairly standard set of names for the different styles, all based on Scottish place-names, none of which have any particular relevance to the jacket concerned.
    Last edited by Phil; 26th October 12 at 02:27 AM.

  6. #6
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    Thank you to all. Rather like the Isle of Skye, Holyrood and Bannokburn tartans then.

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    Quote Originally Posted by David Thorpe View Post
    Thank you to all. Rather like the Isle of Skye, Holyrood and Bannokburn tartans then.
    Not quite. The Isle of Skye was designed by a woman living there, the Holyrood tartan was designed to commemorate the Queen's silver Jubilee.

    The jackets cuffs are more properly called "Mariner's Cuffs", "Gauntlet Cuffs", and plain cuffs.

    ith:

  8. #8
    M. A. C. Newsome is offline
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    Lots and lots of items in Highland Dress have regional names. Sometimes they have historical reasons behind them, but more than often it's just a name given to the style for marketing reasons.

    One example is the Kilmarnock Bonnet. Kilmarnock was once the bonnet making capital of Scotland, so the name makes sense.

    But most of these other examples have no such rationale.

    Argyle jackets
    Inverness capes
    Balmoral bonnets
    Glengarry bonnets
    Argyle kilt hose
    Sheriffmuir doublet
    Montrose doublet
    Crail jacket
    Braemar jacket

    Some more recent examples I have seen in catalogs:
    Culloden shirt
    Glen Urquhart sgian dubh

  9. #9
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    Personally, I am rather fond of the Irn Bru jacket.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by creagdhubh View Post
    Personally, I am rather fond of the Irn Bru jacket.
    Orange tweed?

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