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Thoughts on Philabegs?
Looking around different kilts recently I made eye contact with the idea of a Philabeg. At first the idea of pleating a kilt each wear seemed funny, but the more I thought about it, the less silly it seemed. Anyone have any Philabeg experience/advice?
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I guess that would all depend on how you define a philabeg.
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I was specifically looking at the ones Celtic Croft carries, without cheater pleats.
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My own thought is we left them behind for good reason. I've been known to wear a great kilt hillwalking, but the little kilt still strikes me as a terrible idea in a world where modern kilts exist.
To all the little kilt wearers, enjoy them. Not my bag.
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If one accepts the difference between a feileadh beag (correct spelling) and a kilt is that the pleats are/were gathered in the former and sewn in in the latter then the first thing to realise is that there is no known surviving example of a feileadh beag. For reference we must therefore turn to a number of portraits and drawings etc., of which there are quite a number. What these don't show is the fastening arrangement but it's logical to assume that at least some had some form of drawstring like the feileadh mor did.
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The Following 5 Users say 'Aye' to figheadair For This Useful Post:
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Calling stitched pleats "cheater pleats", when they have been stitched since at least 1782, is quite fatuous.
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Cheater Pleats are the trademarked name Celtic Croft gives them.
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My mistake. I take back my comment then, in that case.
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Originally Posted by liammaclean
Cheater Pleats are the trademarked name Celtic Croft gives them.
Odd how you can trademark a thing that's been around for over 200 years.
Well I guess they've trademarked the name, not the thing.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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2nd June 17, 10:15 AM
#10
I've seen one FB attempt at an event about a year ago. It looked very odd, bordering on girl's skirt-ish, compounded by the choices of t-shirt, socks and ad-hoc accessories with the appearance as if the fellow had purchased the cloth but hadn't yet had the time to sew a kilt together. He didn't look very confident, maybe because it looked like that at any time the whole thing might let go and fall to the floor.
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