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30th August 16, 06:08 AM
#1
I don't believe I have ever seen a box pleated great kilt being worn. Cool.
Geoff Withnell
"My comrades, they did never yield, for courage knows no bounds."
No longer subject to reveille US Marine.
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30th August 16, 09:01 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by Geoff Withnell
I don't believe I have ever seen a box pleated great kilt being worn. Cool.
I'll post pictures with a simple tutorial once I get my plaid.
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30th August 16, 10:42 AM
#3
Kilt folding
I don't know much about this topic, however, I suggest that you might want to start your search with the people over at the Celtic Croft Store (one of our advertisers on this Forum). Please follow-up with photos of your research results.
Aye Yours.
VINCERE-VEL-MORI
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30th August 16, 12:12 PM
#4
Im going to have to purposely take some photos, without weapons. All my photos of me wearing a great kilt also involve me using weapons, and end up getting banished to the weapons forum lest someone lose muscle control over the sight of a tool.
Anyway, You could look for some of my posts.
I still have not put a drawstring or belt in my plaid, but I do have one that I sewed the pleats in.
I tend to stick to actual period descriptions and what can be inferred from paintings, not practices that originated in the costume trailer while filming Lethal Claymore!
Best think I can say is divorce yourself from any desire to replicate a modern kilt, the pleats are not going to be sharp, if you do any sort of living while wearing the garment, its going to not look as good as when you first put it on and Im sure I will think of something more as this thread goes along
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5th October 16, 03:03 PM
#5
How do you pleat to the set?
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5th October 16, 03:26 PM
#6
The forerunner of the kilt was the Leine and Brat.

Some suggest that the Belted Plaid was the brat with the belt from the Leine worn on the outside.
This is known today as a matchcoat.

This sure makes a lot more sense to me than this idea that you see all the time at Ren Faires without a shred of historical evidence behind it.

The guys who lay all this fabric out on the ground are usually using modern kilt fabric. They go on and one about how practical this is. Would you really want to go through this whole process every day?
These same guys will say how you roll up in this to sleep at night. Would it just make more sense to sleep in your blanket?
Last edited by Steve Ashton; 5th October 16 at 03:29 PM.
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5th October 16, 07:10 PM
#7
Well, I hate to have a disagreement with you Steve.
First off, Im of the opinion that matchcoats are a form of ethnic dress, as matchcoat is a Anglicized version of an Algonquin word that more or less translates into "wearing robe" Also as much as I admire the work of Mark Baker and company, they did admit they were far from perfect, and their matchcoat wearing, by Longhunters actually is pretty slim on historical accounts.
Secondly, if you pick up a copy of "A Bard of Wolfe's Army", by Chapman and McCulloch, which is the annotated diary of Volunteer Sgt Thompson of the 78th, on service here in the Americas during the F&I war, there are a couple references to both rolling on the floor to put on the great kilt, and also using it as a blanket.
https://www.amazon.com/Bard-Wolfes-A.../dp/189694163X
But I do agree that trying to turn single width cloth into a great kilt is only going to lead to making something that never was in history! :-)
Last edited by Luke MacGillie; 5th October 16 at 07:14 PM.
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