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Thread: Utilikilts

  1. #1
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    Utilikilts

    I’ve got one casual kilt and another on the way, but I’m thinking I could do with more as summer approaches. Any comments on Utilikilts. Their website is full of yo-dude-ery which isn’t me, but the kilts look interesting. Is the postage from the USA to the UK likely to be a problem.

    What are their socks (sic) like? It would be a pity to dirty good kilt hose gardening or at the gym.

    Comments appreciated.

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    Well, I love 'em. What got me to kilts was seeing a Utilikilt at a Ren Faire. Just had to have one....and I did...and off to the kilt races went this olde geezer. Eventually tried tartan kilts and leather kilts....I've owned 18 Utilikilts over the last ten years or so. Early on they had some quality problems but those seem long ago ironed out. My favorite is the Survivor with all the pockets. Its a great kilt for hiking and flying. One trick is to take the snap pockets off to run through the X ray at the airport. If you walk through the beeper thingie sideways you may avoid the follow up wanding.

    My worry at age 69 is I'd look silly in them. I still own three. I've "outgrown" the others and churned them. They do hold their value well and I've been able to sell them to other guys my size and use the proceeds for more kilts.

    Here's a pic of the Survival I have now...decide if it works for an olde guy.





    Think they call this pattern Desert Digital camo. Hope that helps a bit.
    Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
    Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
    "I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."

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  4. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by JonathanB View Post
    I’ve got one casual kilt and another on the way, but I’m thinking I could do with more as summer approaches. Any comments on Utilikilts.
    I own a Utilikilt Workman which I use for hiking/camping, working out-of-doors around my homestead, and other activities where I'm going to be dirty and sweaty. I don't give a hoot about the "image" that they are trying to sell. For me, it's a very functional and rugged style of kilt that holds up well to abuse. And it's easy to wash!

    The exterior hanging pockets are very useful, and I don't need to wear a sporran with it. The stitching is tough like a pair of blue jeans, and the material is "duck cloth" type canvas. So it's going to be much stiffer feeling than a wool kilt. The pleats are shallow and don't really swish like a wool kilt, and they're stitched at all the folds. So there are a lot of seams in the construction, and it's not really a naturally-folded garment like a wool kilt. If you sit wrong, the pleats will crumple up and you'll have to pull them straight again. And, quite frankly, it's not a very comfortable kilt to sit in if you wear it regimental, due to all the stitching.

    The front apron is very narrow, with pleats on either side, so that when you sit, it drapes between your legs more naturally than a traditional wool kilt. The model I have also has a "modesty snap" inside the front apron and at the rear of the kilt (it's a reverse kingussie style pleating arrangement in the back). You can snap the front to the back between your legs when needed. It feels very awkward to do that, though, and I don't use it.

    Sizing is important on the Utilikilt. It has no side-buckle adjustment like a traditional kilt. It's more like a pair of jeans. You just snap the front closed, and it fits the one size it's made for. You can use a belt to cinch it a little tighter (just like trousers), but it doesn't work all that well on a Utilikilt. It just bunches up the top of the kilt and becomes uncomfortable.

    It doesn't have any of the interfacing or internal pieces that a traditional kilt has (nor does it have all the extra material at the top where the pleats are sewn down in the fell area), so it's much thinner around the waist. I still get hot and sweaty at the top, under my belt, but it's much cooler for wearing in hot weather than a traditional kilt would be around the torso. But to be honest, the lack of pleat swish does tend to minimize the airflow you get underneath.

    Here are some pics I've posted numerous times on this board.


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  6. #4
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    Utilikilts tends get their non-kilt items from outside vendors, and the socks I've seen them carry seem to all come from Sock Dreams. They're inexpensive but not very cushioning. I mostly end up wearing some wool blend hiking socks I got from Costco and those work well.

    As for the kilts themselves, I'm fond of the workman's model. I started with an original, and it's good, but I like the heavier fabric of the workman's. The tradeoff is needing to iron it to keep the pleats vaguely straight. It's not a dress kilt, but having the pleats straight makes it look better, in my opinion. I've read recently that you can put weighted binder clips on the kilt as it's hang drying to achieve the same results.

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    I too like them for hiking, etc. Granted they are not traditional in any sense, but they do generate more conversations than do my traditional Kilts. Not sure of the postage to you so that also may be a consideration.
    Glen McGuire

    A Life Lived in Fear, Is a Life Half Lived.

  8. #6
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    I have an original Utilikilt in dark grey. It is solidly constructed and well designed. It doesn't look or fit quite like a traditional kilt, but it is quite comfortable and easy to get around in.

    Tobus - off topic, but it is nice to know I'm not the only person out there still carrying an external frame pack. It's easier on my back.
    Craig Jones
    ---
    It’s a lang road that’s no goat a turnin

  9. #7
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    I also have two UtiliKilts. Both being "Mockers", one in dark gray, one tan. An interesting addition to the Mockers are the two front slash pockets that go inside hidden and very deep. Also, they have both back pockets. Substantial is the word for the front ones, and I never want for room to carry whatever I need.

    Hawk
    Shawnee / Anishinabe and Clan Colquhoun

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    Hey Tobus,
    Interesting two buckle ranger belt. Looks good. Are those gaters you've made or found?

  11. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by okiwen View Post
    Hey Tobus,
    Interesting two buckle ranger belt. Looks good. Are those gaters you've made or found?
    I made the belt, but the leggings are WWII vintage US Army surplus. I discussed them here (thread now locked due to age). I also have a shorter US Marine pattern, also WWII vintage, that you can see here. Very useful when you live in cactus/mesquite country!

    I don't like wearing any kilt (including my Utilikilt) with the scrunched-down sock look or with otherwise exposed lower legs. Despite all my efforts, I just can't seem to grow my calves into any muscular shape, and they always look like bird legs. And since regular kilt hose look funny to me with a Utilikilt (not to mention they don't hold up well to working outside), I usually wear these leggings.

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  13. #10
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    For a modern utility style kilt you could look at Stump Town kilts. http://stumptownkilts.com/

    Not sure if they ship overseas. I have one of their woman's kilts and I really like it!

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