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18th July 11, 02:43 PM
#1
I think it is silly to attempt to create these rules now. I wear what I want. Please do not attempt to tell me "I'm wrong!".
MEMBER: Kilted Cognoscenti
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18th July 11, 03:00 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Calico
I think it is silly to attempt to create these rules now. I wear what I want. Please do not attempt to tell me "I'm wrong!".
I doubt that this thread has anything to do with you personally. And there is a separate sub-forum for wearing the kilt however you please:
http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/f115/
- Justitia et fortitudo invincibilia sunt
- An t'arm breac dearg
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18th July 11, 04:15 PM
#3
 Originally Posted by Calico
I think it is silly to attempt to create these rules now. I wear what I want. Please do not attempt to tell me "I'm wrong!".
I read both the posts above yours, and I didn't find a single mention of "rules" nor anyone telling anyone else they were "wrong."
What I did find were a lot of "I think..." and "I tend to look for..."
People are free to share their opinions.
Personally, I generally advise people to steer clear of the whole concept of "kilt shirts." You don't need a special shirt to wear with your kilt. What you have in your closet now will likely work.
Now, good fashion sense still applies. I don't think I'd advise anyone to wear their plaid flannel shirt with a tartan kilt! And some colors work better with each other than others.
But apart from that, I think the trap people tend to fall into is the need for a special "kilt shirt," and this leads to those (we all know them) who anytime they don the kilt also put on an "Errol McFlynn" pirate shirt, as if it were part of the uniform. When it fact, such a shirt is neither traditional nor historical - nor is it really modern. What it is, in my opinion, is "costumey."
Some people really like the way they look -- and in the past I wore them, as well -- but I've come to the conclusion that anything that makes the kilt look more like a costume and less like actual clothing is not a good thing, so I tend to avoid that look as much as possible.
Apart from that, my only advice to people is to give tattersal patterns a try. They look fantastic with tartans!
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18th July 11, 04:38 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome
. . .I've come to the conclusion that anything that makes the kilt look more like a costume and less like actual clothing is not a good thing. . .
I think that's a pretty good "rule of thumb". 
Apart from that, my only advice to people is to give tattersal patterns a try. They look fantastic with tartans!
That's something that would never have occurred to me before I began spending time here. And I agree. I'm not sure whether they would be considered a "traditional civilian" shirt, but they do indeed work with tartan.
Here's a personal example from 3 weeks ago, at dinner after about 80 people spent the day thumping, throwing, and generally thrashing each other up in the Marin Headlands:

The lass with me is a Navy vet and former student of mine, who now lives down in southern California but came up for the weekend of training.
Last edited by Dale Seago; 18th July 11 at 04:44 PM.
"It's all the same to me, war or peace,
I'm killed in the war or hung during peace."
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18th July 11, 07:32 PM
#5
I like small and subtle patterns, yet all my shirts are solid colors...mostly white. I much prefer the look of a collared shirt.
There are many well dressed gentlemen within the forum and I do take a lot of cues from them...so I suspect there are some tattersal shirts in my near future. But for now, I enjoy my solids.
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