Kilt Hangar Review, Order Gael Hangars
Okay, as promised.
I met Joe Austin of Order of the Gael (www.orderofthegael.org) at his vendor booth at the Phoenix Highland Games a week ago. His main product is the Kilt Kilt. But I noticed he sells the kilt hangars for his Kilt Kit seperately and I was intrigued by them.
In his brochure Joe says, "The revolutionary design of the Kilt Hangar is perfect for the entire Prince Charlie outfit. Everything is "catered to." The Kilt Hanger is perfectly suited for ladies wear too!!"
Me, I've just been looking for a good kilt hangar for my hand sewn kilts. Seems near criminal to hang them from plastic WalMart hangars as I've been doing and I'm not (yet) a fan of rolling my kilts.
So, I bought one to take home and try out. I liked it so much I ordered nine more - so I'd have one for every hand sewn kilt and an extra for the one on order now.
I paid $17.00 for the one kilt hangar. He gave me a discount when I ordered the nine together and I paid $15.00 each and $14.00 one time for shipping and handling out of Las Vegas, Nevada.
The product is well made and well finished. There is a non-slip crossbar for neckties, traditional garter ties, or kilt hose. There are non-slip patches on the top of the hangar arms to keep jackets from slipping off.
There are notches in the hangar arms to hold a vest/waistcoat. I don't see any way that weakens the hangar. The wood is a very hard wood and there is triangular cross bracing from the non-slip crossbar and the three metal rods that the kilt hangs from.
The part I like the best is the kilt hangar part. The three parallel metal rods are strong and solid. There are two clips on each bar. Joe said he is considering adding a third to each bar.
The back of the kilt (pleats) hang from the back bar. The underapron hangs from the center bar. The apron hangs from the front bar. So the kilt sort of S's into thirds, but it hangs seperatly from each other part. Much different than clipping the three layers crunched up together under one clip. That's the main feature that sold me. Joe includes instructions on how to hang a kilt from the hangar.

This picture clearly shows the waistcoat/vest cut outs, the finish of the hangar, and the kilt hanging from the three crossbars. The necktie is hanging from the non-slip crossbar.

This pic shows the flashes in a zip lock bag clipped to one of the hangar clips. I keep all my flashes that way with a 4x6" index card to hold shape.

This photo shows the Argyle jacket added over the hangar arms. The non-slip patches seem to help stabilize the jacket on the hangar, even with the smooth jacket lining.

This photo shows the kilt on the hangar bars and the waiscoat/vest over the hangar arms and in the cut out notches intended for it.

This photo shows the kilt hanging from just one single hangar clip with no problem at all. These clips are strong. Spreading the weight of the kilt out six ways (or maybe nine ways if Joe adds a third clip to each bar) certainly seems gentle on the kilt.
An old mentor of mine used to say, "When you have a winning hand you push out all the chips." I'm sold, that's why I bought ten of these hangars. I look at it as protection on my investment.
Ron
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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