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5th October 07, 07:11 PM
#1
First Time Out In Public With My Kilt
Today my family went to a rather large fair in Winston Salem. I went kilted for the first time in public. I received numerous positive comments and no negative ones. A couple of guys asked where I bought my kilt (I wore an U.S. Army tartan Sport Kilt).
I ran into several friends who were surprised to see me in a kilt; however, they said it "looked good" on me.
I had a fellow veteran ask me what tartan I was wearing. Needless to say, my response sparked a conversation regarding our respective years of service.
For any newbies who are considering wearing a kilt in public and are experiencing "cold feet," I would say that I encountered easily a thousand people today and did not receive a single negative comment or remark from anyone.
I continue to appreciate this "kilted community" and the members who belong to it.
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5th October 07, 07:57 PM
#2
Jackson1836,
Congratulations on a good outing. I too am pretty new to the kilt. However, almost all experiences have been positive ones.
Every day wearing a kilt is a good day!
Cheers,
"..., and wrote upon it - In memory of our God, our religion, and our freedom, and our peace, our wives, and our children...." Alma 46:12
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5th October 07, 10:55 PM
#3
 Originally Posted by jackson1863
Today my family went to a rather large fair in Winston Salem. I went kilted for the first time in public. I received numerous positive comments and no negative ones. A couple of guys asked where I bought my kilt (I wore an U.S. Army tartan Sport Kilt).
I ran into several friends who were surprised to see me in a kilt; however, they said it "looked good" on me.
I had a fellow veteran ask me what tartan I was wearing. Needless to say, my response sparked a conversation regarding our respective years of service.
For any newbies who are considering wearing a kilt in public and are experiencing "cold feet," I would say that I encountered easily a thousand people today and did not receive a single negative comment or remark from anyone.
I continue to appreciate this "kilted community" and the members who belong to it. 
I went to the reenacments in Gettysburg kilted this summer in July (Pennsylvania in July in a wool kilt... dumb... I'm a mountain man- sue me!) and I had reenactors actually wanting to take pictures with me! It was awesome. People seem way more positive than negative.
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6th October 07, 12:45 AM
#4
Way to go Jackson 1863! Its all good.
I really like the Army tartan. While its meaningful from a service and veteran's aspect, its also a very dignified looking tartan...subtle but strong. I had mine made up in a USA Kilts semi-traditional. Wear it to work a lot because of that dignified look.

If your monitor is on, you might be able to see the bits of blue in the tartan. Subtle, but classy.
Ron
Last edited by Riverkilt; 6th October 07 at 12:47 AM.
Reason: Chancellorsville ghosts
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
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6th October 07, 05:55 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Riverkilt
I had mine made up in a USA Kilts semi-traditional. Wear it to work a lot because of that dignified look...If your monitor is on, you might be able to see the bits of blue in the tartan. Subtle, but classy.
Ron
The kilt looks great! I particularly like the blues, which are the same colors as Army dress blues.
I am not sure if you are a veteran (not that it matters regarding wearing the tartan). If you are, thank you for your service. If you are not, thank you for supporting the military heritage that the U.S. Army tartan represents by wearing the kilt.
The Army veterans of the McKnight family, going back to at least the 19th century and probably even earlier (I'm still doing the genealogical research), salute you!
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6th October 07, 07:09 AM
#6
Congratulations on a great first outing!
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6th October 07, 08:53 AM
#7
Aye Jackson,
Was a Navy Marine kinda kid myself but two great great grandfathers fought for the blue side in Tennessee and defending Washington D.C., had a great Uncle in France for WWI, my father flew for the Army Air Corps in North Africa, and I was born in an Army Hospital (Craig Field, Alabama). The later gave me a great interest in things "Jacksonian."
One of my first "Kilt binges" was in camo kilts (tiger stripe, woodland, CADPAT, forest MARPAT, desert MARPAT, and desert camo) but out grew most of them.
Now seem to be entering a similar kilt binge on military tartan kilts (Royal Air Force, Leatherneck, U.S. Army, with a U.S. Navy on order).
Semper Fi,
Ron
Last edited by Riverkilt; 6th October 07 at 08:54 AM.
Reason: Brasso fumes
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
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6th October 07, 02:05 AM
#8
Yes, as you have found, Jackson, the kilt receives lots of positive attention, and as you wear it more often and gain confidence, hesitation about going kilted will no longer be an issue.
Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.
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6th October 07, 02:18 PM
#9
Looks good on you. Keep on wearing it.
I am a US Air Force veteran, Dad was Army, and my brother was Navy. I regularly wear an Air Force or Navy Sportkilt. Haven't got around to buying an Army one yet. Nobody has yet questioned me yet about the significance of the tartan on any of my kilts.
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6th October 07, 03:12 PM
#10
Congrats on a successful first outing, I too wore my kilt in public for the first time not long ago and like you found it to be a very positive experience.
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