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  1. #1
    Join Date
    25th October 15
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    Thank you, that's exactly what I was after.

    I suspected it was Victorian at the earliest and probably later.

    I've none. I'm not really going for authenticity, just trying not to mix and match too much. Probably all for naught as regardless of what kilt I wear this weekend I'll have on my coisiche monaidh ghillie brogues (hiking boots--my feet ain't what they used to be and they're the only shoes I've got I can last all day in.)

    I was thinking I might just use a cap badge if I felt the need. Maybe not.
    Slàinte mhath!

    Freep is not a slave to fashion.
    Aut pax, aut bellum.

  2. #2
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    25th September 04
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    Victoria, BC, Canada 1123.6536.5321
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    As the kilt pin is Bling, or the equivalent to a lady wearing a brooch, going without one should cause no heartache.

    And don't worry about what type of pin. It is quite common for kilt guys to go to flea markets and scrounge around in the jewelry boxes looking for new and unique kilt pins. I have a different one on each kilt. Sometimes I put them on and sometimes not.
    Steve Ashton
    www.freedomkilts.com
    Skype (webcam enabled) thewizardofbc
    I wear the kilt because:
    Swish + Swagger = Swoon.

  3. #3
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    18th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by freep View Post

    I was thinking I might just use a cap badge if I felt the need.
    Yes exactly, some of the Victorian kilt pins seen in The Highlanders Of Scotland look just like the cap badges these gents are wearing- strap & buckle circle with clan crest in the middle.

    BTW many of the do-dads we think of as necessary today weren't then. In THOS one sees bonnets worn with no badges, kilts with no kilt pins, socks with no sginean or flashes. Contrary to expectations, the Victorian Highland costume was often the epitome of plain-ness, with no metal whatsoever. The jackets worn are often just the plain ordinary jackets of the period.

    Note what we don't see. The gent on the right has no cap badge, or even cockade. Neither gent has a kilt pin, or sgian, or flashes. The jackets are plain, with ordinary buttons. The shoes likewise are plain ordinary shoes. Note that the sporrans have no metal whatsoever: plain leather stitched cantles, tassels in leather cones.



    And a photo from the same period showing the same sort of thing, in case anyone questions the accuracy of the MacLeay portraits



    Here's one of the very few kilt pins seen in THOS, the gent on the left, which appears to be the same as his cap badge.



    This wearing of a cap badge as a kilt pin is alive and well in Scotland, with the Boghall & Bathgate Pipe Band (looks like the piper on the far right misplaced hers)

    Last edited by OC Richard; 16th March 16 at 05:33 AM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

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  5. #4
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    Very interesting!

    I like the diversity in style. I was surprised by the long jacket in the photo.

    Thanks
    Slàinte mhath!

    Freep is not a slave to fashion.
    Aut pax, aut bellum.

  6. #5
    Join Date
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    What's noticeable in the painting while the gentleman wearing a kilt pin is that the is fully dressed up, silver buckled shoes, sword, baldric, belt, plaid with huge silver broach.
    Whereas the other gentleman appears to be in a less formal style of dress. Both against an outside background when they were probably posed indoors.
    Would the be a early case of 1 kilt 10 looks?
    To me it would indicate that klt pins were thought of as formal dress items only.
    Last edited by The Q; 17th March 16 at 12:34 AM.
    "We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give"
    Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill

  7. #6
    Join Date
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    Here's something that most would disagree with:

    4.35 Regimental Kilt Pin. The regimental kilt pin is designed to secure the outer and inner aprons of the kilt in windy weather. The pin is adorned with the Regimental Badge. It is worn by fastening it on the right hand side of the outer apron on the second sett from the base of the apron.

    From: Australian Army Standing Orders for Dress, Volume 2, Part 2, Chapter 4 - Scottish Dress
    Last edited by Bruce Scott; 17th March 16 at 02:25 AM.

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  9. #7
    Join Date
    6th November 08
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    While not all of the highlanders portrayed are wearing kilt pins some do, I have two that are both c.1870. The two pins are both in the shape of a stag leg and are made from sterling silver with smokey Quartz hooves. One is about 5" long and quite heavy, the other is about 2" in length. I've often wondered if the smaller was a child's or more likely a women's kilt pin or perhaps a lapel pin as it is more detailed. I doubt that either were intended for daily use and more than likely were reserved for dress occasions.
    Click image for larger version. 

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    Being male is a matter of birth,
    Being a man is a matter of maturity,
    Being a gentleman is a matter of choice!

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