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7th August 06, 09:29 PM
#1
Aprons and napkins
Ok, l little advice is hereby solicited
This may sound stupid, but when you wear a $400 item of clothing, you want to take care of it. I'm gonna be afraid to eat spaghetti, or anything greasy or staining for fear of dropping some on the kilt apron. Yeah, I know, "Dude, use a napkin! Or lean over the table!" Most paper napkins are pretty useless as lap protection. I could just carry my own big napkin in the sporran, I guess. And how about driving while eating a double quarter-pounder with cheese? Told you it sounded stupid.
What do you experienced folks do?
Convener, Georgia Chapter, House of Gordon (Boss H.O.G.)
Where 4 Scotsmen gather there'll usually be a fifth.
7/5 of the world's population have a difficult time with fractions.
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8th August 06, 12:02 AM
#2
I usually eat in fear of getting food on a nice kilt. I even once mistook my apron for a napkin and was within a mm of wiping my king crab covered fingers on it. It's even worse when you have a white fur sporran in the drop zone too. Anyway here is my learned solution. Carry a heavy white paper napkin (I sometimes ask for a few spares when I eat in a restaurant that has the good ones) in you sporran. When you are eating anything that could spoil a kilt take out the napkin and cover your lap and unhook you sporran straps and re-install it face down on lap. Cover that with the hopefully cloth napkin that is at your particular establishment and you are protected. O'Neille
Last edited by O'Neille; 8th August 06 at 09:27 AM.
Reason: grammar
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8th August 06, 09:03 AM
#3
 Originally Posted by O'Neille
I usually eat in fear of getting food on a nice kilt. I even once mistook my apron for a napkin and was within a mm of wiping my king crab covered fingers on it. It's even worse when you have a white fur sporran in the drop zone too. Anyway here is my learned solution. Carry a heavy white paper napkin (I sometimes ask for a few spares when I eat in a restaurant that has the good ones) in you sporran. When you are eating anything that could spoil a kilt take out the napkin and cover your lap and unhook you sporran straps and re-install it face down on lap. Cover that with the hopefully cloth napkin that is at your particular establishment and your protected. O'Neille
I have to disagree here, bear with me...
I take my sporran and slide it to my left hip and then put the napkin over my lap. The sporran should never be in your lap while seated for a meal or while dancing, it should always be slid to your left hip. The reason for the left hip is that your dancing partner is always held to your right hip and shoulder and the sporran is out of the way and will never come into contact with her. Of course this is generally for ballroom dancing, (yes, some of us still dance and don't just jump around on the dance floor), where your hip, arm and hand lead your lady. As for the left hip while seated for a meal...? Why change hips?
The effects of a sporran under a napkin are obvious, if you spill something on the napkin, the spill goes to both sides of your napkin with the sporran making a mound under the napkin and soils two areas of your kilt as opposed to running right down the 'valley' made by your lap and the napkin and onto the floor with your sporran moved to your hip.
The napkins in a restaurant serve a double purpose for me. The first thing that I use a napkin for, and generally they're cloth napkins, I reach behind me with the napkin and grab the corners of the napkin and smooth my kilt down as I sit down which keeps the pleats even and distributed underneath me, much more efficient than the 'buttsweep'. This can be accomplished without anyone even noticing or at worst the folks around you will see the reason and never raise an eyebrow.
Chris.
Last edited by KiltedKnight; 8th August 06 at 07:29 PM.
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8th August 06, 03:46 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by KiltedKnight
The napkins in a restaurant serve a double purpose for me.
Chris. 
There another thing a good cloth napkin is good for. Fold it cross way about maybe 70/90 cm wide, hold an end in each hand with some nice slack in between, lay a pat of butter in the slack part, then pull the napkin tight with a sharp snap. Butter should fly to the ceilng. Oh, how childess of me.
Jack
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8th August 06, 04:47 PM
#5
I used to have a heavy cloth napkin that would work great...I'm going to have to dig that out to take to the restaurants!
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8th August 06, 10:12 PM
#6
Don't eat while driving... Keep the hands on the wheel... :-) Anyway, I usually just get as close to the table as possible. Granted, I'm not skinny, so I'm less likely to get food dropping into my lap. Instead, it may hit my shirt. But, unless you're in an chair with arms, it should still be easy to do...
-J
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8th August 06, 04:00 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by turpin
And how about driving while eating a double quarter-pounder with cheese?
Should you really be driving while eating a double quarter pounder ?????
Sounds a bit dangerous to me.
If it doesn't kill you it might just kill someone else.....You would be too busy concentrating on dripping your food on your lap and not concentrating FULLY on the road...
Last edited by kiltedjaz; 8th August 06 at 04:04 AM.
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8th August 06, 07:04 AM
#8
Driving and eating don't mix.
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8th August 06, 09:16 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by kiltedjaz
Should you really be driving while eating a double quarter pounder ?????
Sounds a bit dangerous to me.
If it doesn't kill you it might just kill someone else.....You would be too busy concentrating on dripping your food on your lap and not concentrating FULLY on the road...
You're right. A double cheeseburger and chocolate shake would probably be safer for one-handing.
Convener, Georgia Chapter, House of Gordon (Boss H.O.G.)
Where 4 Scotsmen gather there'll usually be a fifth.
7/5 of the world's population have a difficult time with fractions.
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8th August 06, 11:10 AM
#10
Depending on the napkin's fabric (in the case of cloth napkins), you have to be careful not to grab your kilt by accident if the napkin slips, etc., and either you wipe your mouth/hands with your kilt or pull your face to the napkin so hard that you smack your head on the edge of the table. I've only done the former... thank goodness only with a UK.
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