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25th November 20, 03:55 PM
#1
Kilt outfits and colour selection
A topic that comes up on these boards regularly is the one of matching.
I put together some collages- what are called "mood boards" in film costuming- showing three different levels of matchiness.
First are outfits where everything matches, that is, there is only one colour chosen. In other words the kilt's main colour is chosen for all accessories.
Here are monochromatic outfits in white, cream, black, grey, and blue. Note that one photo of an all-grey outfit could be mistaken for a black & white photo if it wasn't for a swatch of red tartan on a shelf behind.
The next level in complexity is outfits using two colours. In other words, the kilt's main colour is one of two colours chosen for all accessories.
Here are outfits in red/black, purple/yellow, and grey/blue.
All the outfits above look over-designed and over-simplified to my eye.
The next level is outfits using three colours. Now we're getting to the sorts of outfits generally chosen by Pipe Bands and pipers, and many non-pipers too.
Note that none of these outfits actually employ three colours. Rather, they use a kilt that's neither black nor white, with entirely back and white accessories. This thing of having the only colour in an outfit being the kilt, the rest being black or white, was a huge fad in the Pipe Band world starting around 1990 and has not yet entirely abated.
I haven't yet hunted for photos showing four-colour outfits, that's next.
But just as food for thought here's an illustration from a Highland Dress catalogue from the 1930s. Note that there are no repeated colours save for some accessories echoing colours in his kilt's tartan. We also may note that his bonnet and hose, while blue, are different from each other and also from the blue in the kilt.
navy blue bonnet
Lovat green jacket
tartan green/royal blue tartan kilt
brown sporran
light blue hose
black shoes
Also here's a piper playing in a higher-level solo competition. His kilt is primarily green and purple and neither of these colours appear in his accessories. Once again his bonnet, jacket, and hose are different from each other and from his kilt. (There might be a tiny splash of purple in his flashes!)
Last edited by OC Richard; 26th November 20 at 07:59 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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25th November 20, 10:59 PM
#2
Richard, just wanted to say that I found this very helpful. I've never been great at coordinating outfits: matching my belt with my shoes was about as far as I ever got. Coordinating an outfit with Tartan as proven quite the challenge, but thanks to the helpful folks such as yourself here and over in the K&C group on Facebook I'm slowly getting the hang of it (I think). I still tend to try to match a bit too much I think, but posts like this are helping me see that you can look great without matching everything.
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26th November 20, 03:39 AM
#3
WOW - that purple / yellow number looks like an outfit for the Joker!!
I was looking through some jackets on ebay this week and spotted a fine array of colours (for those in the UK) they reminded me of an old Murray Mints commercial from the 70s or 80s in which they had three guys rigged out in green, blue and yellow tartan with matching PCs for the different products (original, cool-mint and butter-mint) - if only I could find it I would share.
Anyway the jackets I saw come in red, claret, pink, cream and various blues and greens:
My own tastes are perhaps a little more subdued - although perhaps a bit matchy matchy for some:
Last edited by Tomo; 26th November 20 at 03:42 AM.
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26th November 20, 08:16 AM
#4
Hopefully not too far off topic, but something that jumped out at me, in the OP post, was the line from the 1930’s catalogue, about the apron being secured by a kilt pin!
waulk softly and carry a big schtick
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26th November 20, 08:18 AM
#5
Tomo, to my eye except for the far-left outfit (which has hose that match the kilt) your outfits follow the principle of the main accessories neither matching the kilt nor each other, which I think looks best.
Spending my life in the Pipe Band world, where outfits are generally viewed en masse, from a distance, and mostly from behind I came to realise that from a design standpoint a Highland outfit consists of three major equal-sized horizontal bands of colour
Jacket
Kilt
Hose
This being the case, outfits that have all three match are throwing all of their colour possibilities out the window, and outfits that match two of the three are still only utilising less than half their potential.
Outfits that have all three contrasting are firing on all cylinders, and Tomo's centre and right-hand outfits are like that.
Here's the Pipe Band thing, the overall design is like a flag having three equal horizontal stripes black/red/white
That photo is from the 1990s when everybody wore white hose and black jackets and the overall intent was to have the kilt be the only coloured thing, all other elements being either black or white.
With Highland outfits worn by individuals, which are seen closeup and separately, there's far more room for subtlety and more complex colour juxtapositions than in Pipe Band uniforms which tend to have 3-colour or 2-colour schemes.
Last edited by OC Richard; 26th November 20 at 11:26 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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26th November 20, 11:05 PM
#6
I admit it: I like matching. Partly for aesthetic reasons, and partly because I am not the sort of person who could pull off non-matching accessories without someone thinking, "Oh, poor thing, either she couldn't find the hose and top that matched her kilt this morning and had to wear just anything that was clean, or all she can afford is to just buy whatever even though it doesn't go together."
Here's tae us - / Wha's like us - / Damn few - / And they're a' deid - /
Mair's the pity!
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27th November 20, 01:02 AM
#7
Originally Posted by Katia
I admit it: I like matching. Partly for aesthetic reasons, and partly because I am not the sort of person who could pull off non-matching accessories without someone thinking, "Oh, poor thing, either she couldn't find the hose and top that matched her kilt this morning and had to wear just anything that was clean, or all she can afford is to just buy whatever even though it doesn't go together."
Maybe just change your thinking. The opposite of matching is not non-matching, it's complementary. And for the people whom can't tell the difference... well just think of the outing as a stroll in the Highlands amongst the sheep.
Frank
Drink to the fame of it -- The Tartan!
Murdoch Maclean
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