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  1. #1
    Join Date
    21st May 19
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    Two Kilts, One Good pair of hose

    Opinions only, please!

    A few weeks from now I'll take delivery of my 2nd Kilt, this time in Kennedy Modern (13 oz Strathmore). It will make a nice [Texas] cool season counterpart to my reiver weight casual in Cameron modern

    I have yet to buy kilt hose and was wondering if there was one color that would work well with both?

    kennedy.PNG kilt cam.PNG

  2. The Following User Says 'Aye' to Cameron of Texas For This Useful Post:


  3. #2
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    Hose Color

    Lovat green. Definitely,.......... goes with everything. You could do white, but half the people on this forum would gag, and the other half would quietly say "Aye."

    Cheers,

    David
    "The opposite of faith is not doubt. Doubt is central to faith. The opposite of faith is certainty."
    Ken Burns

  4. The Following 6 Users say 'Aye' to kiltedsawyer For This Useful Post:


  5. #3
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    I took up knitting because shipping here is insane, all the rules with AFIP are not US expat friendly.

    Look, if I can knit, anyone can.

    Plus alpaca wool here is dirt cheap, so all my hose are alpaca, except the ones I learned on - they are acrylic.

    Just learned how to dice, so finishing the test soon

    https://scontent.fcor2-2.fna.fbcdn.n...11&oe=5E305011

  6. The Following 6 Users say 'Aye' to Katzbalger For This Useful Post:


  7. #4
    Join Date
    24th January 20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katzbalger View Post
    I took up knitting because shipping here is insane, all the rules with AFIP are not US expat friendly.

    Look, if I can knit, anyone can.

    Plus alpaca wool here is dirt cheap, so all my hose are alpaca, except the ones I learned on - they are acrylic.
    So...this seems like it might merit another thread, but this interests me greatly. I've looked all over the place, and the only non-wool option I've found for diced hose are the nylon ones from J. Higgins:

    https://www.jhiggins.net/hose-diced-...-machine-knit/

    I love my alpaca winter socks. If you were to start a store of alpaca highland wear, I would think you could do quite well. Is it possible you could expand on your process a little bit or post a how-to guide for people like me who know nearly nothing about knitting?

  8. The Following User Says 'Aye' to MichiganKyle For This Useful Post:


  9. #5
    Join Date
    17th April 18
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    I am terrible at forums, I apologize

    Quote Originally Posted by MichiganKyle View Post
    So...this seems like it might merit another thread, but this interests me greatly. I've looked all over the place, and the only non-wool option I've found for diced hose are the nylon ones from J. Higgins:

    https://www.jhiggins.net/hose-diced-...-machine-knit/

    I love my alpaca winter socks. If you were to start a store of alpaca highland wear, I would think you could do quite well. Is it possible you could expand on your process a little bit or post a how-to guide for people like me who know nearly nothing about knitting?
    Knitting looks difficult, but it is easy. No matter how intimidating it looks, don't let it bother you.

    I'll try to get the camera on my phone working proper and created a new thread - not real good at technology, but I will ask for help if over my head. I'll keep it kindergarten (I was a master electrician, I trained many an apprentice and I like things spelled out to me in the most basic of ways, I live by the acronym KISS).

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  11. #6
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    14th July 15
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    Alpaca is AMAZING.


    Quote Originally Posted by MichiganKyle View Post
    So...this seems like it might merit another thread, but this interests me greatly. I've looked all over the place, and the only non-wool option I've found for diced hose are the nylon ones from J. Higgins:

    https://www.jhiggins.net/hose-diced-...-machine-knit/

    I love my alpaca winter socks. If you were to start a store of alpaca highland wear, I would think you could do quite well. Is it possible you could expand on your process a little bit or post a how-to guide for people like me who know nearly nothing about knitting?

  12. #7
    Join Date
    10th January 19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cameron of Texas View Post
    I have yet to buy kilt hose and was wondering if there was one color that would work well with both?
    Since I'm in the sweltering armpit of Texas (Houston), I typically go with cotton kilt hose ... which has the added benefit of being dirt cheap. $10 to $20 per pair. At those prices, I'll buy a pair of hose simply because it matches one of my shirts.

    USA Kilts and Scottish Trading Co. both offer hunter/forest green cotton kilt hose. I think both of those would work well with your kilts. In general, however, it's easier to match to a minor color in your kilt, rather than one of the major colors. I think both tartans have a minor yellow line. So you could pick a pair of hose with a yellow hue (probably a mustard yellow) as an option. Or you could go with black kilt hose. It's neutral, so it would work with Cameron. And Kennedy has a black as a minor color.

    However, I frequently choose my kilt hose based on the color of my jacket/waistcoat/shirt. What are you planning to wear on the top half?

  13. The Following 3 Users say 'Aye' to Karl R For This Useful Post:


  14. #8
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    17th April 18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Karl R View Post
    Since I'm in the sweltering armpit of Texas (Houston), I typically go with cotton kilt hose ... which has the added benefit of being dirt cheap.
    I wore wool socks in the Army, I am from Phoenix - trust me, wool wicks the sweat away from your feet also decreases odor. I live sub tropical now - still wool.

  15. The Following 7 Users say 'Aye' to Katzbalger For This Useful Post:


  16. #9
    Join Date
    10th January 19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katzbalger View Post
    wool wicks the sweat away from your feet also decreases odor. I live sub tropical now - still wool.
    I agree ... but I'm also talking about body heat, not just sweat. And I realize this is treading into economics ... but body heat is fungible.

    My wife and I just got back from a two week vacation in Yellowstone (where we had a solid week of winter ... daily snow and below freezing temperatures). It took work to convince my wife that she could keep her fingers and toes warmer if she just warmed her core temperature. (She's a native Houstonian ... while I delivered newspapers for years in the Midwestern winters.)

    The opposite is also true. If I can lose an extra degree or two through my calves, that's a bit less sweat through my body and head. And sometimes, every little bit counts.

  17. The Following 2 Users say 'Aye' to Karl R For This Useful Post:


  18. #10
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    You can't have enough pairs of hose.

    Since I don't know what you pay for good hose in the States, this might sound a bit cheeky - but it's not meant to be. Most seasoned kilt-wearers will have many pairs of hose. After stopping to count I find currently I have ten pairs of kilt hose - three lovat (green, blue and 'oatmeal'), four pairs of dark (navy, claret, green and black), two pairs of diced (dark green/black and lovat green/lovat blue) and one pair of cream or ecru.

    The rules for wearing are not set in stone and can be roundly bent on a whim - but the lovats tend to be for casual kilt or for day-wear with a tweed jacket. The darks are for more formal day-wear but might be worn as evening-wear if it's what I fancy. The diced hose are for evening wear and which pair I would wear would depend on how I felt about the combination of kilt and jacket. The ecru hose are as a rule not worn and are only kept for some kind of imaginary emergency where only cream hose will do - thankfully this never happens.

    For day-wear I tend to stick with ancient red flashes and for formal or evening-wear I have a selection of blues, greens, black and scarlet. New kilts come with tartan flashes these days - I never wear them as I consider them to be a fashion fad.
    Last edited by Dr Bee; 15th February 20 at 07:44 AM.

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