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12th July 14, 07:53 AM
#1
Complemets and "cracks"
I wear only kilts. Either USA Casuals or Utilikilts. It depends on the amount of "pocket" space I need and whether a sporran would be in the way or be damaged doing what I plan to do.
Both seem to get about the same number of compliments and "the questions" from both sexes.
The tartan Casuals look nicer but get the "where is your bagpipes" question more often.
( My response is, "You don't want to hear how badly I play". )
The wise cracks are from people who would do it to anyone who doesn't dress like the rest of the sheep and have never gotten physical here. I have a sense of humor and better jokes on tap.
slàinte mhath, Chuck
Originally Posted by MeghanWalker,In answer to Goodgirlgoneplaids challenge:
"My sporran is bigger and hairier than your sporran"
Pants is only a present tense verb here. I once panted, but it's all cool now.
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13th July 14, 06:25 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by tundramanq
I wear only kilts. Either USA Cit wassuals or Utilikilts. It depends on the amount of "pocket" space I need and whether a sporran would be in the way or be damaged doing what I plan to do.
Both seem to get about the same number of compliments and "the questions" from both sexes.
The tartan Casuals look nicer but get the "where is your bagpipes" question more often.
( My response is, "You don't want to hear how badly I play".  )
The wise cracks are from people who would do it to anyone who doesn't dress like the rest of the sheep and have never gotten physical here. I have a sense of humor and better jokes on tap. 
I've really only had one stupid comment and to be honest it was from the person I would have expected it from. I've looked at utilikilts and didn't really like them. I'm not keen on the narrow apron most of them seem to have. Pockets aren't a major necessity either really, just something to keep my empty wallet in.
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1st August 14, 06:08 AM
#3
My Favorate Utility style has been the TDK. I have 4 of them and wear them the most. Ive never had any "gay" comments towards me either. And if I did, who cares....
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27th September 14, 12:32 AM
#4
I own a utilikilt, the original in dark green. I love it, i do a lot of hiking and fishing with it. Its very usefull for going into creeks, even when it gets a bit deeper.
For my experience: poeple think a lot that the kilt is straight out from military surplus - the dark green colour makes that appearance. When poeple come up with it i m joking them at the beginning and everybody is then positively surprised about the fact, that the kilt would have a modern revival.
i think also the utilikilts look quite tough, i get less comments compared to a scottish tartan kilt, which is immediatly recognized from evreybody. Utilikilts look kinda rough ;)
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27th September 14, 06:33 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Aron27
I own a utilikilt, the original in dark green. I love it, i do a lot of hiking and fishing with it. Its very usefull for going into creeks, even when it gets a bit deeper.
For my experience: poeple think a lot that the kilt is straight out from military surplus - the dark green colour makes that appearance. When poeple come up with it i m joking them at the beginning and everybody is then positively surprised about the fact, that the kilt would have a modern revival.
i think also the utilikilts look quite tough, i get less comments compared to a scottish tartan kilt, which is immediatly recognized from evreybody. Utilikilts look kinda rough ;)
I'm considering one for work next March, but there are a bewildering variety. Ithink I prefer the khaki colour, that or black.
Last edited by Mel1721L; 27th September 14 at 06:34 AM.
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27th September 14, 06:52 AM
#6
If you already own several tartan kilts, and wear them regularly, then you're probably already thought of as "the kilt guy" in the places you frequent. If you throw a canvas one into the rotation, it would be thought of as just another one of your kilts. The worst comments you might get are "I like the plaid ones better" or that kind of thing.
It always amuses me that here in the one section in the one forum on the whole board that is set aside for conversation about contemporary kilts, the first half dozen comments in every thread are posted by men that wouldn't be caught dead in one. I UNDERSTAND that if your phone or browser is set up to just show all of the new threads, then that removes them from this context. I'm not calling them out or anything, I'm just saying, when you take these posts in the context of this forum, it's funny.
- Tom -
"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on, or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Caesare Innocente
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27th September 14, 09:45 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by Java
If you already own several tartan kilts, and wear them regularly, then you're probably already thought of as "the kilt guy" in the places you frequent. If you throw a canvas one into the rotation, it would be thought of as just another one of your kilts. The worst comments you might get are "I like the plaid ones better" or that kind of thing.
It always amuses me that here in the one section in the one forum on the whole board that is set aside for conversation about contemporary kilts, the first half dozen comments in every thread are posted by men that wouldn't be caught dead in one. I UNDERSTAND that if your phone or browser is set up to just show all of the new threads, then that removes them from this context. I'm not calling them out or anything, I'm just saying, when you take these posts in the context of this forum, it's funny.
Yes I suppose I am the kilt guy. Didn't really look at it that way. I think there is enough difference between traditional and contemporary kilts to have seperate sections on the forum though. I wonder if there are utility kilt wearers who don't wear tartan. I suppose there must be. Anyway, although I'm not keen on them, I can see the practical application for work purposes.
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27th September 14, 10:41 AM
#8
The kilt is a very distinctive, recognizable garment. And I agree with the "kilt guy" comment. It doesn't take long, believe me. This summer, I wore a utility kilt on some of my delivery runs (organic produce to local restaurants and markets). Although I only deliver to any given place once a week usually, most people would have seen me in my kilt.. What.. maybe twice? But this past week, I chose to wear slacks and I swear, no less than 3 different kitchen staff asked me why I wasn't wearing my kilt... Lol.
And on that note, there really didn't seem to be ANY cognitive distinction between tartan and utility. For most people there isn't. A kilt is a kilt, is a kilt. Some workman laying paving stones asked me where I got mine, and then proceeded to tell me his entire Scottish/Irish family history. Keep in mind, that pretty much everything you see here on XMarks in terms of topics we discuss, represent 100 times MORE detail about kilts than 99% of the population will ever know.
BTW, as for there being people who wear utility and not tartan kilts... I used to be such a person. And I would venture to guess that many of Utilikilts' customers probably never go on to buy a tartan kilt. Again, as popular as XMarks is, we still represent a very narrow demographic.
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27th September 14, 11:57 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by CDNSushi;125852if
The kilt is a very distinctive, recognizable garment. And I agree with the "kilt guy" comment. It doesn't take long, believe me. This summer, I wore a utility kilt on some of my delivery runs (organic produce to local restaurants and markets). Although I only deliver to any given place once a week usually, most people would have seen me in my kilt.. What.. maybe twice? But this past week, I chose to wear slacks and I swear, no less than 3 different kitchen staff asked me why I wasn't wearing my kilt... Lol.
And on that note, there really didn't seem to be ANY cognitive distinction between tartan and utility. For most people there isn't. A kilt is a kilt, is a kilt. Some workman laying paving stones asked me where I got mine, and then proceeded to tell me his entire Scottish/Irish family history. Keep in mind, that pretty much everything you see here on XMarks in terms of topics we discuss, represent 100 times MORE detail about kilts than 99% of the population will ever know.
BTW, as for there being people who wear utility and not tartan kilts... I used to be such a person. And I would venture to guess that many of Utilikilts' customers probably never go on to buy a tartan kilt. Again, as popular as XMarks is, we still represent a very narrow demographic.
I tend to wear shorts if I'm working or just going for bread or something, simply because its quicker and easier to change and wear a kilt for going out anywhere else including dog walking, in all I've only been a kilt wearer for about 6 months and its quite radical for me and kilt wearers in Spain are rarer than hen's teeth. I don't think I'd be comfortable out and about in a utility kilt but for working in, it remains a possibility.
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27th September 14, 02:17 PM
#10
 Originally Posted by Mel1721L
I wonder if there are utility kilt wearers who don't wear tartan. I suppose there must be.
Yup. I love tartan but don't have a lot of interest in wearing it myself. I do have a Graham that I alternate with a solid black kilt when my wife and I shoot weddings as I need to be dressed fancy-like. Otherwise, no tartan for me. I wear camouflage a lot.
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