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1st March 11, 12:19 AM
#1
Tartan of the Month - March
Something a little different this month. What do you see: tartan, cut, style, date etc. Have a crack at reproducing the sett.
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1st March 11, 05:27 AM
#2
I've heard of a headless horseman, but a cyclist? :-)
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1st March 11, 06:10 AM
#3
At first glance the multitude of thin red stripes brought MacDonald to mind but this is not MacDonald standard sett. Looks asymmwtric with one red strip, then a tight red pair, then two more separate ones, then the repeat. And then there is that yellowish green trip thrown in.
Obviously a coat of some sort, but a bit long for typical kilt wear, and the cyclist has on breeches of some sort anyway. Boneshaker cycle is straight out of the late 1800s, probably the end of the century with the sprung seat, from my knowledge of cycling gear.
Tough to see much more on my little laptop screen. Will review again when I get home to my 23 inch where I can see better.
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1st March 11, 06:36 AM
#4
Originally Posted by ForresterModern
Obviously a coat of some sort, but a bit long for typical kilt wear, and the cyclist has on breeches of some sort anyway. Boneshaker cycle is straight out of the late 1800s, probably the end of the century with the sprung seat, from my knowledge of cycling gear.
Although put together in this museum setting it would be wrong to 'assume' that the coat, trousers and cycle are contemporary.
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1st March 11, 10:03 AM
#5
The twill lines run the 'wrong' way (unless the image is mirrored), but as you mentioned a couple of months ago this is a modern idea.
The colours are very rich which makes me think that the piece hasn't seen much action and/or isn't very old. I'm not familiar with the styles of various periods, but it looks like it might be 18th C. If it were made with some of the earliest aniline dyes that might explain its resilience as well, but that green isn't as bright as I might suspect from an aniline green. If it were mid 18th C. then the cultural preference might run toward the more muted greens of older dyes.
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1st March 11, 12:06 PM
#6
I have no idea what the tartan is, but I love the colors, and the cut of that coat!
Edit: I'd guess by the setting and the look of the cut that this coat is from around the turn of the 20th century, when bicycles of that style were in vogue.
The fear o' hell's the hangman's whip To laud the wretch in order; But where ye feel your honor grip, Let that aye be your border. - Robert Burns
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1st March 11, 12:14 PM
#7
Assymetric sett? Regency period? Colors don't seem far off of Wilsons' red, blue, and green.
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1st March 11, 01:33 PM
#8
Originally Posted by unaspenser
I have no idea what the tartan is, but I love the colors, and the cut of that coat!
Edit: I'd guess by the setting and the look of the cut that this coat is from around the turn of the 20th century, when bicycles of that style were in vogue.
See post #4
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1st March 11, 01:35 PM
#9
Originally Posted by davidlpope
Assymetric sett? Regency period? Colors don't seem far off of Wilsons' red, blue, and green.
It's a bit too early in the month to confirm/give clues and so I'll let others have a crack first.
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2nd March 11, 02:30 PM
#10
Originally Posted by figheadair
See post #4
How could I have missed that? *headdesk*
The fear o' hell's the hangman's whip To laud the wretch in order; But where ye feel your honor grip, Let that aye be your border. - Robert Burns
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