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5th September 12, 02:35 PM
#1
noticable trend of tartan knee-length shorts
This isn't exactly directly Kilt-related but I've been noticing a preponderance of guys wearing tartan knee length shorts this summer. I'm not sure if this is new this year or was also seen last year (since I wasn't wearing a kilt last summer, I may not have noticed).
Anyway, I see a lot of tartan-like shorts. Many are light colours and dark lines but some are darker tartans of different colours (like green and black).
I wonder if this is part of some subliminal cultural gravitating towards kilts which hasn't quite yet manifested beyond the knee-length shorts stage.
Sometimes I see some guy in these tartan shorts that are baggy and just think "he's so close to kiltedness ... just needs to cut that middle divider cloth out".
Anyway, just a modern trend I've noticed and wonder what it means. Perhaps it is a precursor to some sudden cultural explosion of kilt wearing (perhaps this is what all these ideas of 2012 and the Mayan Calender are all about? hmmm?). I'm not Nostradamus but I predict that after December 21, 2012, men will be walking out kilted in droves!
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5th September 12, 02:40 PM
#2
Hi,
one could notice this trend either in Germany...
I usually thought these guys should better decide to wear a kilt instead of these pyjama like shorts!
Kneelength+tartan=kilt
"A true gentleman knows how to play the bagpipes but doesn't!"
Member of Clan Macpherson Association
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5th September 12, 02:50 PM
#3
Yes - in the recent sweltering weather there has been an outbreak of plaid shorts - or rather loose britches as they are not all that short, being at or below the knee.
I remember the rather startlingly short shorts worn by visiting Europeans a couple of decades ago - used to have the old dears tutting and the retired colonels losing their monocles.
The modern ones do look rather like pyjamas.
Anne the Pleater :ootd:
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5th September 12, 03:07 PM
#4
They're usually some generic tartan, and I personally don't like the look of the patterns. It is a rising trend though.
Gillmore of Clan Morrison
"Long Live the Long Shirts!"- Ryan Ross
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5th September 12, 03:19 PM
#5
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madras_(cloth)
As a fashion trend, madras comes and goes.
--Always toward absent lovers love's tide stronger flows.
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5th September 12, 03:20 PM
#6
This is one of those "what's old is new again" retro trends. These were popular in the 50s, 60s, and 70s but phased out of fashion in the 80s. They weren't as baggy back then, so this is a modern rendition of that look.
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5th September 12, 03:25 PM
#7
 Originally Posted by Tobus
This is one of those "what's old is new again" retro trends. These were popular in the 50s, 60s, and 70s but phased out of fashion in the 80s. They weren't as baggy back then, so this is a modern rendition of that look.
Exactly, when an industry runs against a wall to come up with something new they look back at what was popular. While walking through J C Penny Co looking at dress shirts I saw a plethora of plaid snap button cowboy style shirts. I grew up wearing these in the 50's and 60's. Funny they are back, along with the plaid baggy shorts.
"Greater understanding properly leads to an increasing sense of responsibility, and not to arrogance."
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5th September 12, 03:29 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by brewerpaul
Exactly, when an industry runs against a wall to come up with something new they look back at what was popular. While walking through J C Penny Co looking at dress shirts I saw a plethora of plaid snap button cowboy style shirts. I grew up wearing these in the 50's and 60's. Funny they are back, along with the plaid baggy shorts.
Those shirts never went out of style here in rural Texas...
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5th September 12, 03:49 PM
#9
 Originally Posted by Tobus
Those shirts never went out of style here in rural Texas...
Agreed indeed. Being a Native Texan born in the pan handle, raised in Central Texas with roots deep in the German Hill Country I know full well that they have been and always will be the style to be worn. I always have to head to D and D Western Wear in Seguin when I need a new pair of boots or hat and look through all the shirts. The plaid snap button always stay around when all the other "Western wear" comes and goes. It is just interesting to see them re-surge as a style in other places.
"Greater understanding properly leads to an increasing sense of responsibility, and not to arrogance."
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5th September 12, 04:17 PM
#10
And here I was thinking that "plaid" was something you wore, as in, day plaid, pipers plaid, etc. Not a design
I think we have had this conversation before.
Shoot straight you bastards. Don't make a mess of it. Harry (Breaker) Harbord Morant - Bushveldt Carbineers
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