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10th August 21, 05:19 PM
#1
Formal dress accesories
With full formal kit, Prince Charlie, bow tie, white shirt, waistcoat, dress sporran:
Miniature medals with, or without fly plaid?
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10th August 21, 06:06 PM
#2
No Fly Plaid
Originally Posted by 5thgroup
With full formal kit, Prince Charlie, bow tie, white shirt, waistcoat, dress sporran:
Miniature medals with, or without fly plaid?
I would not wear the fly plaid. BTW, welcome to Xmarks!
Allen Sinclair, FSA Scot
Eastern Region Vice President
North Carolina Commissioner
Clan Sinclair Association (USA)
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10th August 21, 06:40 PM
#3
I would not bother with the fly plaid.
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10th August 21, 09:23 PM
#4
I do not even own a fly plaid. And probably never will.
When I had my kilt shop I did a lot of wedding rentals. Many guys asked about a fly plaid because that is the look they would see on the web.
So I would tell them this. The core of the classic, and refined look is simplicity. Formal wear is the one place where less really is more. Keep It Simple Stupid and you can never go wrong
If you must have a fly plaid, try this - The Fly Plaid is worn by the groom to the alter. At some point, usually just after the exchange of rings, the groom un-pins the fly from his shoulder and drapes it over his brides shoulder. It is now hers, and it is what she wears during the dancing.
And that is the only time and place for a fly plaid. Unless of course, you need an excuse, to wipe every wine glass off every table as you walk by.
Last edited by Steve Ashton; 10th August 21 at 09:31 PM.
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10th August 21, 11:13 PM
#5
You don't define 'Formal Dress' but my guess is that you mean Black Tie, as opposed to White Tie or Levee wear. The Fly Plaid has no place in any in my view. It belongs in the Hire Shop window. Not that any of us is likely ever to attend a Levee but if one did, then a Half Plaid could be an appropriate addition.
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13th August 21, 09:26 AM
#6
With my Prince Charlie and vest, I wear a standard white cotton formal shirt (mine has a wing collar, although turndown is perfectly OK, too). The shirt requires studs and cuff links. I wear a black bow tie (it's worth tying it yourself--it's the same knot as you use to tie your shoes, so it's easy and looks better than pre-tied). Typically, I'll have my pocket watch stowed in the vest. I have a white furry sporran for formal events. Below the kilt, I wear argyle/tartan hose and a pair of patent leather oxfords.
If the weather calls for it, I have a black balmoral bonnet that I may wear on my way to the event I am attending, but it, of course, comes off when I arrive.
Other accessories are strictly optional. Some, like the fly plaid, are pretty expensive and impractical to wear.
If you look around this forum, you will see a lot of good role models for kilted formal wear.
Andrew
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25th August 21, 06:36 AM
#7
Originally Posted by 5thgroup
With full formal kit, Prince Charlie, bow tie, white shirt, waistcoat, dress sporran:
Miniature medals with, or without fly plaid?
About the military medals I know nothing, except to point out that Highland Evening Dress is purely civilian, so I would think you would follow your nation's regulations for wearing their decorations with civilian attire.
About Evening Dress accessories, the background/history is that in the Victorian period men sometimes appeared, in Evening Dress, with the full catalogue of accessories:
plaid and brooch
sword belt and sword
dirk belt and dirk
pair of all-steel Highland pistols
powder-horn on chain
sgian
and often a kilt pin, though in Victorian times kilt pins were far less popular than they are today.
Between 1900 and 1920 Highland Dress underwent a major transformation and all of these accessories were jettisoned save the sgian and kilt pin.
This photo from 1910 shows Evening Dress in transition; the swords and belts are gone, but plaids and dirks remain.
The new small Evening sporrans had yet to appear.
The same dress in a 1909 catalogue
By 1930 all those accessories were gone.
So a man appearing at an evening do in 1930 wearing Victorian impedimenta would be viewed as quite out-of-date.
And so it has remained, though the Kilt Hire Industry (which exploded in popularity beginning in the 1970s) has done its darnedest to sell people on wearing plaids, dirk belts without dirks, etc.
Last edited by OC Richard; 25th August 21 at 07:03 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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28th February 22, 03:43 PM
#8
White tie Highland attire
I know some may not like or care to wear the dirk,but I think it does have a place if allowed.
This is a white tie outfit I've just finished putting together. The dirk works for me.
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1st March 22, 01:29 AM
#9
received_1089428954952474.jpg
Not the best photo, but this would be my go to for black tie. I agree that the tartan hose are not necessary, but where else would I wear them? This occasion was a Masonic lodge installation at which I was also the piper.
I don't own a fly plaid & am unlikely to. I do own a full plaid, but would only ever wear that when turned out as a piper as in my avatar image.
Cheers,
Rama4390
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3rd March 22, 06:02 AM
#10
Personally, here are my Evening Dress outfits.
On the right (Drummond of Perth tartan) is a modern traditional (c1920-present) look with "fully fashioned" Argyll hose and modern Evening Dress seal sporran.
On the left (Isle of Skye tartan) is a more oldfashioned look with goathair Edwardian sporran and castellated hose. I should note that long hair sporrans were never fully replaced by the modern small seal Evening Dress sporrans and are considered proper even today.
Modern (non-Highland) Black Tie etiquette calls for a shirt with ordinary collar.
Note the almost entire lack of accessories, mine consisting only of sgian and kilt pin, which as you see are subtle and don't change the overall look. Adding more accessories begins the "cumulative costume effect".
Last edited by OC Richard; 3rd March 22 at 06:16 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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