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2nd April 18, 11:36 AM
#1
Tattersall shirts
I very much enjoy watching BBC Canada programs on the TV and especially dramas from the 1930's to the 1950's. Often on the shows I watch there are gentlemen of a, what might be called, for lack of a better term, country class and certainly from an older generation. Almost always these gentlemen are wearing waist coats with striped ties and "tattersall" shirts. When I first noticed this I thought to myself, By Golly those folk really do need help when picking out their day attire, heh! heh!....... To be honest I never knew that style of shirt had a name until I looked it up after hearing it referred to here, and mostly by Jock Scott, when he is advising us what is proper and what isn't in highland day wear attire.
At first, to me, Jock sounded like a bit of a curmudgeon, but I have softened that opinion to just Jock's way of expressing himself...... I still haven't come to the point where I would wear a tattersall shirt with a striped tie with my waist coats BUT I don't think any one who does wear such a shirt with a striped tie and waist coat needs help when choosing their day attire either
To me Jock is at one end of my spectrum on kilted daywear attire and those that choose a tee shirt, ordinary or scrunched down socks with boots, and wear their kilt at the same height as blue jeans and at their knees or below, are at the other end
I really want to thank Jock for his advice on how the kilt and day wear attire is worn in the Highlands. The more I see his advice in practice the more I agree with it .......not that my opinion matters to anyone except me.
I still haven't bought a tattersall shirt yet, although I do have a couple striped ties .....
Thanx for the advice Jock......I hope you all had a very nice Easter.......and please keep posting photos, as the old saying says " a photo is worth a thousand words"......cheers!
Last edited by Terry Searl; 10th April 18 at 11:51 PM.
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2nd April 18, 12:31 PM
#2
Although I'm aware that your message is intended to reach beyond the subject of your title, I have to say that I love the Tattersall shirts with kilted daywear. Now finding a proper, British Tattersall via U.S. sources is quite the challenge unfortunately. I would imagine that such is not the case in the Great White North.
My Clans: Guthrie, Sinclair, Sutherland, MacRae, McCain-Maclachlan, MacGregor-Petrie, Johnstone, Hamilton, Boyd, MacDonald-Alexander, Patterson, Thompson. Welsh:Edwards, Williams, Jones. Paternal line: Brandenburg/Prussia.
Proud member: SCV/Mech Cav, MOSB. Camp Commander Ft. Heiman #1834 SCV Camp.
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2nd April 18, 02:47 PM
#3
Glad you brought this up Terry, I had never heard of tattersall either and I'm still trying to figure out what exactly it is. Some examples I found all seem to have one common trait , small to medium squares of the same or various colors. Is that right? Are these all tattersall shirts?
Edit: What about this one is it considered tattersall also? Seems like it might compete with the kilt tartan too much to me.Thanks.
Last edited by tokareva; 2nd April 18 at 08:41 PM.
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2nd April 18, 03:12 PM
#4
Examples of tattersall shirts:
Last edited by Bruce Scott; 2nd April 18 at 03:15 PM.
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California Highlander,Downunder Kilt,Father Bill,Hirsty,kiltedsawyer,kingandrew,Liam,MNlad,Terry Searl,ThistleDown,Tim Little,tokareva,tripleblessed
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2nd April 18, 04:02 PM
#5
I wear tattersall, or what I call check shirts almost exclusively. Check shirt being the 18th Century term, and my hold on the 21st Century is rather tenuous.
I like the Barbour tattersalls for winter. A light cotton flannel, I have pair of them, tan and maroon lines, not a button down.
I have a number of Arrow and Orvis tattersall's in linen and cotton that are lightweight and appropriate for even the hottest of days, but they almost all tend to be button down collars.
https://www.warwickshireclothing.com has a number of options, but I have only purchased a pair of plus 4's from them, not any of their shirting.
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2nd April 18, 04:30 PM
#6
Some more (subtle) check options:
Gingham
Window Pane
Last edited by Bruce Scott; 2nd April 18 at 05:16 PM.
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3rd April 18, 07:03 PM
#7
Originally Posted by Luke MacGillie
I wear tattersall, or what I call check shirts almost exclusively.
Likewise for seven months of the year, kilted or otherwise. However when the mercury rises and the sun beats down I retreat into my paisley and floral linen armour and put away the kilts so I don't get heatstroke!
For anyone looking for very good tattersall shirts at a reasonable price, I get them on markdown here: https://www.josephturner.co.uk/sale/...l_check_shirts
Keep in mind they're sized in the same way as dress shirts, i.e. by collar size and sleeve length. Selection is extremely limited however as these are the final stock from the prior year, and the leftover shirts tend to be in uncommon sizes. Good luck!
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2nd April 18, 09:34 PM
#8
Originally Posted by tokareva
Where did you find that green shirt? I love it.
Descendant of the Gillises and MacDonalds of North Morar.
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2nd April 18, 10:14 PM
#9
My own definition is a pattern of two or three coloured thin stripes in a checked pattern, usually on a white or beige background. Think one which can go with a tweed or wax jacket.
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2nd April 18, 10:28 PM
#10
Originally Posted by FossilHunter
Where did you find that green shirt? I love it.
This looks like the same one:
https://store.westleyrichards.com/w-...hirt-olive-red
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