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22nd August 18, 02:06 PM
#1
Sett vs. Stripe
I have 4 kilts all made to the sett and they look very nice. I have looking into having a kilt made to the stripe and in my research I read that some tartans do not work as well set to the stripe as others. Is there a general way to determine what would work best for each tartan. I have ordered swatches of several tartans but they are too small to play with and make a determination. Suggestions? Thanks.
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22nd August 18, 02:12 PM
#2
Of course this is taste and artistic preference stuff, but my own opinion is that just about any tartan works to the stripe or sett.
Having said that, I do have friends who will tell me I'm tasteless.
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.
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22nd August 18, 02:21 PM
#3
Seems like a few members here have used an editor (Microsoft paint, photoshop, etc.) to make up different patterns.
"We are all connected...to each other, biologically; to the earth, chemically; to the universe, atomically...and that makes me smile." - Neil deGrasse Tyson
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22nd August 18, 02:22 PM
#4
Originally Posted by Father Bill
Having said that, I do have friends who will tell me I'm tasteless.
Tasteless, never! Opinionated, quite and rightly so (always for the good of the masses).
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22nd August 18, 02:30 PM
#5
If your kiltmaker will send some photos of the options is what I've found best to decide. They just fold the cloth. Ask that a few pleats get folded back to show the reveal, as that can give a better idea of what the swish will show those behind you
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22nd August 18, 03:05 PM
#6
One easy way to test out various pleating options is to download an image or graphic of your Tartan.
Then in one of paint programs you crop to the element you want
Then past multiple copies of that element together.
You can even, as shown above, skew one of the cropped images to show what the flash behind a pleat can look like.
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22nd August 18, 03:42 PM
#7
Or if you don't have a paint program and meanwhile have the time and patience (ADD goes both ways ), you can just make a whole bunch of copies of said stripe and overlay them, then take a screen shot:
tullibardine1.jpg
I do recommend that you pair the result with the unaltered image as I have, so you can see if you not only like the pleats but the way they'll contrast with the apron. Also, try shrinking the result to see how it'll look from a distance. I tried another one with the center of the cluster of blue stripes, and while this is just my my opinion, I didn't think it was possible for something to be so simultaneously busy and plain:
tullibardine2.jpg
And yeah, perhaps Murray of Tullibardine isn't the best example, but it was the first tartan image I saw when scrolling through my Documents folder...
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23rd August 18, 01:19 PM
#8
Originally Posted by Taskr
If your kiltmaker will send some photos of the options is what I've found best to decide. They just fold the cloth. Ask that a few pleats get folded back to show the reveal, as that can give a better idea of what the swish will show those behind you
This sounds like a good option but would require purchasing the fabric first.
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23rd August 18, 01:35 PM
#9
Originally Posted by TallmanAZ
This sounds like a good option but would require purchasing the fabric first.
Ah. I had presumed that the cloth was one that was already available to the kiltmaker.
The computer image method, then, is a good one. I even went so far as to print a 8x14 page of the tartan, simulating a length of the cloth, and folded it various ways. (someone else said ADD )
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