View Poll Results: Where do you wear the top of your kilt?
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31st March 13, 02:02 PM
#1
Where do you wear your kilt?
I'm getting ready to order a new kilt (the diet keeps making me change sizes. Yay...?) and I wanted to get some input.
It's been forever since I was able to wear my kilt (ordered years back when I was much smaller) and a few months back I ordered a "quickie" kilt that came in a standard cut but fit my width. It struck me that it seemed to want to ride WAY high on my body to fit to the top of my knees -- almost four inches above my navel. Then I broke out my old tank and laid the new one on it, and lo and behold they were the same height -- only very different widths.
That made me start to wonder everything I ever thought about where one wears a kilt, so since I'm ordering a new one, I thought it would be good to check with conventional wisdom FIRST.
So. Here's the question.
When you wear your kilt as you prefer, how high up does the top of it sit? Is it at your navel (where I *thought* it was supposed to be), higher than your navel (how much higher?) or BELOW your navel?
Help a confused brother out. 
Tony
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31st March 13, 02:09 PM
#2
To be honest, when I first looked at kilts before purchasing, I thought below the knee was okay (I SHUDDER at this now)...then middle of the knee (really not my cup o' tea). Now, I'm up to the top of the knee, the proper traditional height.
When I didn't know anything about kilts I thought jeans waist. Then navel. Now, I'm an above the navel kind of guy, as high as it takes to get the bottom to the top of the knee, which is paramount over where the waistband lies. Regimental height is okay (ribs) but civilian height (navel-ish) is preferred.
Last edited by TheOfficialBren; 31st March 13 at 05:33 PM.
The Official [BREN]
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31st March 13, 02:15 PM
#3
From what I know, both from my dealings with the band and in the military, the kilt when worn should be about 1cm off the ground, should you kneel. Now the question is, why are we kneeling on both knees in the first place?
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31st March 13, 02:28 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by Eric D Scott
Now the question is, why are we kneeling on both knees in the first place?
It's Easter Sunday. We should give thanks!
Rev'd Father Bill White: Mostly retired Parish Priest & former Elementary Headmaster. Lover of God, dogs, most people, joy, tradition, humour & clarity. Legion Padre, theologian, teacher, philosopher, linguist, encourager of hearts & souls & a firm believer in dignity, decency, & duty. A proud Canadian Sinclair with solid Welsh and other heritage.
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31st March 13, 02:58 PM
#5
Depending upon my waist size, how tightly I strap the kilt, and the length of the event, the top of my kilt rides between 1.5 to 2.5 inches above my navel.
Last edited by McElmurry; 31st March 13 at 05:32 PM.
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31st March 13, 03:04 PM
#6
I think I might not have been clear. I'm asking about the TOP of the kilt, not the bottom where it comes down on yer knees. ;)
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31st March 13, 06:26 PM
#7
 Originally Posted by Father Bill
It's Easter Sunday. We should give thanks! 
Good reply Reverand.
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31st March 13, 02:21 PM
#8
I suspect that it depends how the kilt is made. Bespoke? Customised? Made to measure? These terms can mean much the same, but they do imply a certain amount of individual measurements have been taken , whilst off the peg does not. So it really does depend -----plus, if you add personal preference to how the kilt should sit to the measurements, then it can depend quite a lot.
I was always taught it is the the bottom of the kilt ----the hem for ease of description-----and where it sits in relation to your knee-cap is paramount and to a point, the top can look after itself. But on average perhaps for kilts where your input of measurements are involved and a certain amount of advice from the kilt maker then, somewhere around the belly button or an inch or two higher would be somewhere near.
No doubt every kilt maker and every kilt-wearer will have there own view on this, but I doubt that there will be major disagreements over this, apart from-------where the kilt selvedge(hem) should sit!
Last edited by Jock Scot; 31st March 13 at 02:25 PM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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5th April 13, 01:52 PM
#9
Tony, I have 10 kilts and 9 of them are "traditional" cut. My most recent kilt was my first wool kilt, and it's a "casual" kilt that's worn at the hip level. When it arrived and I tried it on, I really like the lower kilt level.
I kind of share your quandary, because now my confusion is this. As seem to be swapping out P.V. kilts for wool, do I continue to order Traditional cut, or a few of the casual cut, that seem to fit so well?
The lower (about 22.5 inches long in stead of 24.5-25 inches) "casual cut" can be worn below your /my (Uhumm) gut, and (at least I think) don't make me look quit so (shall I say) out of shape...LOL..
If I'm going to spend roughly $300.00 (m/l) for wool kilts instead of $80.00 to $100 for the P.V.'s that I have (and love) right now I'm going for the higher wear. With the traditional cut kilt I'll always have the option of wearing one of them with a P.C., which I have yet to buy.
Obviously I'm still a bit undecided, because I now have one wool "casual 5 yard" kilt and just ordered a new "traditional" length wool kilt.
Stan L.
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