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  1. #1
    Join Date
    5th June 16
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    Help finding inexpensive tartan fabrics (by the yard/metre)

    Hello everyone! I'm a newbie here, so please bear with my questions! My family and I are planning to attend an event over the summer for which we were hoping to wear some items I am sewing up; hopefully 2 kilts and three tartan-flaired dresses. As the event is outdoors and during the scorching summer of the Midwest USA, I was ideally looking for a tartan that was rayon(poly-viscose)/acrylic or cotton rather than wool, if only to save us from heat exhaustion. We were most interested in finding the Irish National tartan.

    It's been days of searching, and unfortunately I cannot find any non-wool bolts or by the yard fabrics--and all of those are a little out of my price range! I'm appealing to your vast collective knowledge at large, then--does anyone know of anywhere I can find non-wool tartans that are relatively inexpensive and might have the Irish National tartan in stock?

    Thank you in advance for reading!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    7th May 14
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    have you tried USA Kilts? I know they have the tartan you are looking for but don't know if Rocky will sell it by the yard or what it would cost.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    9th October 10
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    Inexpensive is a relative term.

    USA Kilts actually does not list Irish National tartan as available in PV. I don't know if that specific tartan is woven in PV.

    16 oz wool is going to cost around $75-$80 USD/yard. $300 for just the material for an 8 yard kilt. Lighter wool will save you a few dollars, but don't go lower than 13oz for a kilt.

    However, since you mention heat exhaustion, wool actually breathes well in the summer. The consensus around here is generally that less yardage is preferable to lighter material for warmer weather. You could make 2-4 yard kilts from nice wool.

    I have no idea what yardage might be required for the dresses you want.
    Quote Originally Posted by Alan H View Post
    Some days you're the bat, some days you're the watermelon.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    16th June 15
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    Stillwater kilts has a couple lines of lesser priced kilts which are available in the Irish National Tartan and which are made from acrylic. It might be worth checking with them to see if you can talk them out of some yardage. It's not going to be the same quality as wool or PV, but it might be workable.

    http://www.stillwaterkilts.com/

    My wife makes dresses from 13 oz. Marton Mills wool, and the thing that makes them hot isn't really the wool, which actually breathes pretty well. It's that at least the upper half needs to be fully lined with something fairly substantial or it's pretty scratchy to wear.


  5. The Following 3 Users say 'Aye' to Todd Bradshaw For This Useful Post:


  6. #5
    Join Date
    5th June 16
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    Thank you all for your advice and help! I appreciate it immensely.

    Todd, your wife makes STUNNING dresses!!! So gorgeous!

  7. #6
    Join Date
    16th June 15
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    Madison Wisconsin
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    Yep, she's pretty special. She grew up in Latvia under soviet occupation where they even had to make their own blue jeans, so she is pretty adventurous about sewing projects. It's fun to watch her take part of one pattern, another part from another pattern and some added bits and make something new. As long as I keep buying tweeds, designing tartan variations and making most of the leather accessories, she keeps cranking out neat stuff for both of us. The only annoying part is that you can't trust patterns, so in most cases you have to make a test garment from cheap cloth, just to see if it actually fits the way they claim it does before you cut into the good stuff - especially custom tartan.

    Did you ever find any fabric?

    Marite in the grey version of our T-6 tartan. She got a lot of looks and nods in it at the recent Milwaukee Highland Games.
    Last edited by Todd Bradshaw; 7th July 16 at 10:35 AM.

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