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7th February 13, 12:48 AM
#1
 Originally Posted by pascs
I can wear the Weathered Mackenzie with a black or brown shirt, tweed tie and charcoal jacket. This would be ok for a formal event but probably not acceptable at a black tie event.
I don't know if there is a english language breakdown here, but formal is black/white tie. Or if during the day, formal would be morning suit equivalent.
For the OP, I would wear a weathered tartan to a formal event, in fact, I have, it was a MacLaren tartan kilt. The only difference to the Ferguson tartan is that our yellow stripe is your white stripe
Last edited by Downunder Kilt; 7th February 13 at 12:52 AM.
Shoot straight you bastards. Don't make a mess of it. Harry (Breaker) Harbord Morant - Bushveldt Carbineers
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7th February 13, 02:32 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by Downunder Kilt
I don't know if there is a english language breakdown here, but formal is black/white tie. Or if during the day, formal would be morning suit equivalent.
For the OP, I would wear a weathered tartan to a formal event, in fact, I have, it was a MacLaren tartan kilt. The only difference to the Ferguson tartan is that our yellow stripe is your white stripe
Sorry typo on my part should have written informal 
I think it depends on the weathered tartan, my Mackenzie weathered is light browns and greys which I dont feel goes well with black jacket etc. However if the tartan is more blues and greens then that would fit better.
I do have our local Burns night tonight so might try out the weathered tartan and see how it looks
Last edited by pascs; 7th February 13 at 02:42 AM.
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7th February 13, 03:29 AM
#3

I wear my Weathered Gordon to black tie events and see it as my best kilt. My three other "good" kilts are ancient tartans and I would wear any of them with a PC.
John
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7th February 13, 04:09 AM
#4
Am I missing something, because I am really struggling to understand the question?
If a tartan is the official tartan of a Clan, how can the colourway palette affect its formality?
Surely the quality of the kilt (yardage, material weight, stitching) is more important than the colour?
Regards
Chas
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7th February 13, 04:36 AM
#5
Weathered tartans normally comprise of faded colours such as greys and browns and they are designed to look as if the fabric has faded over many years of use and normally worn as day wear. There is no reason that these weathered tartans can not be worn with black tie but since the aim of the tartan is to look worn, old and faded it would not be what you would normally pick as your best kilt to wear with your best formal black jacket and black tie.
However that is just my opinion and with everything regarding kilts there is no reason that you cant wear your kilt anyway you want
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7th February 13, 05:07 AM
#6
There is nothing anywhere that says a particular color palette, be it weathered, ancient, modern, muted, etc., is more suited to one level or formality than another. There is absolutely no reason under the sun that you could not wear a weathered tartan to a formal event. The only determining factor is personal preference.
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7th February 13, 05:55 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome
There is nothing anywhere that says a particular color palette, be it weathered, ancient, modern, muted, etc., is more suited to one level or formality than another. There is absolutely no reason under the sun that you could not wear a weathered tartan to a formal event. The only determining factor is personal preference.
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Last edited by creagdhubh; 7th February 13 at 05:55 AM.
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7th February 13, 07:04 AM
#8
 Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome
There is nothing anywhere that says a particular color palette, be it weathered, ancient, modern, muted, etc., is more suited to one level or formality than another. There is absolutely no reason under the sun that you could not wear a weathered tartan to a formal event. The only determining factor is personal preference.
Another *** to Matt's post. Weathered/Reproduction/Muted tartans simply offer another colour range than the modern/ancient colours, but it doesn't make them less appropriate.
The "1 kilt, 10 looks" thread is a perfect example of how any kilt can be dressed up or down and still look perfect. Regardless of colour choice.
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