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Thread: Diced hose

  1. #11
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    I happen to think that the shepherds plaid look good for casual wear as well. Sort of like diced, but not really.

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  3. #12
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    In fact I prefer diced hose to full clan hose. I have an old pair of Scots Guards red/green diced hose as well as pairs of full clan hose for Royal Stewart and for Muted McLeod but think I might get a pair of diced hose in a 'muted' blue and green colour.

  4. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thomas H View Post
    OK is it OK then to wear dice hose with day wear as I love that look . And side note ,is it OK to wear a long hair sporran with day wear ?
    Short answer, No.

    There is a member here who has been known to wear both tartan hose and hair sporran with day wear and I think he makes it work fantastically, however it is in my view an exceedingly hard thing to do well and generally best avoided. Diced hose with daywear is not a combination that works as a modern combination.

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  6. #14
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    Not unless you've got the right gear. My old friend Steve McVeigh could carry it off with this outfit. I remember him telling me that he got the jacket and vest fashioned from old photos of P/M GS McLennan :-

    Steven McVeigh.jpg

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  8. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ron Abbott View Post
    Not unless you've got the right gear. My old friend Steve McVeigh could carry it off with this outfit. I remember him telling me that he got the jacket and vest fashioned from old photos of P/M GS McLennan :-

    Steven McVeigh.jpg
    As a piper this works as it is part of a uniform, as a civilian I don't think this is the right way to go as a civilian I will save my diced hose for formal wear.

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  10. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jock Scot View Post
    If that is what you want to wear then do so. However you will look, at the very least, rather theatrical.
    Diced turn down tops I think are spot on for day wear. Diced hose (as in from knee to toe) I must disagree are not day wear hose.
    Last edited by Wil; 21st July 14 at 11:58 AM.
    LOCH SLOY!
    Cheers, Wil

  11. #17
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    In my opinon:

    Self-coloured hose, or hose with patterned tops (cuffs) look splendid with day attire. Diced/Argyll style hose look equally splendid for black or white tie affairs. However, there is certainly nothing incorrect about wearing self-coloured/hose with patterened tops for evening wear as well.

    Cheers,

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  13. #18
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    I have diced and tartan hose and would not wear them with tweed day wear. I reserve them for the more formal end of black tie and for white tie occasions.

    There have been some long and detailed threads about this.
    Natan Easbaig Mac Dhòmhnaill, FSA Scot
    Past High Commissioner, Clan Donald Canada
    “Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland, And we, in dreams, behold the Hebrides.” - The Canadian Boat Song.

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  15. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jock Scot View Post
    If that is what you want to wear then do so. However you will look, at the very least, rather theatrical.
    This is a critical point, though I would have worded it differently.

    When someone speaks of Highland Dress as traditional, it implies that it has evolved to its present state through an unbroken lineage of antecedents from an unknown origin.

    (The evolution or change wasn't at a steady pace but at what is called, to borrow a term from another field, punctuated equilibrium. After over a half-century of relative stability Highland Dress underwent a fairly rapid and thorough transformation around 1900, producing the Traditional Highland Dress we know today.)

    To go back along that unbroken chain of evolutionary stages and pluck something out (say, from 1880, or 1780) and wear it today would be an example of historical, rather than traditional, dress, or as Jock is implying, a costume.

    Since around 1900 it's been plain/selfcoloured hose and outdoor brogues with Day Dress. Tartan and dice hose were reserved for Evening Dress. Mixing these two modes was to be avoided. However it's easy to find photographs of men wearing diced and tartan hose with Day Dress well past the c1900 point, so the 'rule' wasn't always followed.
    Last edited by OC Richard; 21st July 14 at 05:52 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

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  17. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by McMurdo View Post
    As a piper this works as it is part of a uniform, as a civilian I don't think this is the right way to go...
    I will point out that the jacket Steve is wearing is purely civilian. It's a version of the jacket nearly universally worn by civilians (pipers or not) throughout the latter half of the 19th century and well up into the early years of the 20th.
    Last edited by OC Richard; 21st July 14 at 05:58 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

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