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 Originally Posted by artificer
3) if you've ordered 5yd double width you probably won't have enough for the kilt, waistcoat, AND plaid. Assuming you're doing an 8yd kilt of one pleating or another that leaves you with ~1yd dw, which is just over what you need for a bias-cut waistcoat.
:cthulhusmiley:
Thank you for your opinions.
That 3rd option was meant to be "no kilt but only a waistcoat and a day plaid" to be used with my black kilt.
As you see I am struck with the magic of Cthulhu so I can not express myself or make decisions. Must find the Lovecroft books and read them again. Last time was years ago....:cthulhusmiley: (Borrowed your smiley. Can this be called a smiley?)
If people did not sometimes do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever get done.
--- Ludwig Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951)
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 Originally Posted by Kylahullu
Thank you for your opinions.
That 3rd option was meant to be "no kilt but only a waistcoat and a day plaid" to be used with my black kilt.
As you see I am struck with the magic of Cthulhu so I can not express myself or make decisions. Must find the Lovecroft books and read them again. Last time was years ago....:cthulhusmiley: (Borrowed your smiley. Can this be called a smiley?)
Ah, apologies for the misinterpretation. FWIW I'd still do the kilt and waistcoat and leave the plaid off. You're almost certain to get more use from the kilt than from a plaid.
Here's what my kilt and waistcoat look like

:cthulhusmiley:
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to artificer For This Useful Post:
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Here's a "flashy" option for pleating the Cthulhu that I did for a customer last fall. When the person is standing still, the kilt looks dark from behind. As soon as he/she starts walking, the pleats "flash" the bright green.
If you're thinking of having someone make the kilt who has never made one before, it is a _very_ easy pleating option for a beginning kiltmaker. The pleating is the hardest part, and the pleating in the pic below is easy because it's pleated to a solid color block. I have no doubt that the seamstress you know in your family could do a fab job using the instructions in The Art of Kiltmaking.

Last edited by Barb T; 4th May 14 at 07:23 AM.
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The Following 8 Users say 'Aye' to Barb T For This Useful Post:
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If you buy from the UK, the VAT is included in the price and you won't pay any extra. The tax and postage costs make buying from the U.S too expensive. I used to buy clothes from there but the postal rates increased so I had to stop.
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Thank you all for these useful ideas. While the jonesing for The Book goes on I have had some looks at Lady Chrystel's and Paul Henry's pages. Both look good. Paul Henry has even a picture of this R'Lyeh tartan there, I think that is a sample of pleating to purple line.
One example I find very tempting is Barb's picture (#6). Might be my choice if continuing on the path of having the professional seamstress but a first time kilt maker making this kilt. Would be nice to have a kiltmaker close. There are not many kiltmakers in Finland, I know none making traditional kilts. Well, not so many using kilts either...
Waistcoat; this picture (#5) of artificer shows a really nice example.
Is it possible to have a waistcoat to be used with kilt and with trousers or do they have to be different?
Day plaid; the idea struck me when ordering tickets to an open-air show in a court-yard of a medieval castle in Finland this summer. The evenings can be chilly and they advice taking something warm with you when attending. But I think this R'Lyeh tartan will become a kilt and I will attain something else to keep me (and the companion) warm. But I am still thinking that having a length of cloth carried as day/shepherd's/shoulder Plaid might be a convenient way to have something warm with you to be used when in need... let's see.
If people did not sometimes do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever get done.
--- Ludwig Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951)
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Generally speaking, a kilt-cut waistcoat will be shorter than a pants-cut. The reason is that the kilt rides higher, and the kilt-cut waistcoat will allow for the sporran so they don't overlap.
A pants-cut waistcoat will generally be longer to reach the pants-waist which we all know is generally lower on the body than the kilt-waist.
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 Originally Posted by Kylahullu
Thank you all for these useful ideas. While the jonesing for The Book goes on I have had some looks at Lady Chrystel's and Paul Henry's pages. Both look good. Paul Henry has even a picture of this R'Lyeh tartan there, I think that is a sample of pleating to purple line.
One example I find very tempting is Barb's picture (#6). Might be my choice if continuing on the path of having the professional seamstress but a first time kilt maker making this kilt. Would be nice to have a kiltmaker close. There are not many kiltmakers in Finland, I know none making traditional kilts. Well, not so many using kilts either...
Waistcoat; this picture (#5) of artificer shows a really nice example.
Is it possible to have a waistcoat to be used with kilt and with trousers or do they have to be different?
Day plaid; the idea struck me when ordering tickets to an open-air show in a court-yard of a medieval castle in Finland this summer. The evenings can be chilly and they advice taking something warm with you when attending. But I think this R'Lyeh tartan will become a kilt and I will attain something else to keep me (and the companion) warm. But I am still thinking that having a length of cloth carried as day/shepherd's/shoulder Plaid might be a convenient way to have something warm with you to be used when in need... let's see.
In case you are having trouble deciding between the kiltmakers Lady Chrystel and Paul Henry (I have a kilt from each of them) then I wouldn't hesite to say that Paul Henry is the better kiltmaker of the two (by a country mile). Just my experience.
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The Book arrived.
The seamstress in the family will make the kilt.
Living exiting times :cthulhusmiley:
...all this and jonesing for the used Roxborgh-tartan kilt from UK.
If people did not sometimes do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever get done.
--- Ludwig Wittgenstein (26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951)
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