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  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by GG View Post
    Really? If done at both sides, it shouldn't do anything with the centre of the back - or am I wrong?
    Th apron and fell are often pleated to create a definite feature of the sett in the centre front and back, so that if the waist is narrowed or enlarged that feature, or sometimes pair of features moves off centre.
    Once you see it it can really stand out - a pair of stripes or bands, a particularly vivid band, if not centred makes the whole garment look lopsided.

    Anne the Pleater
    I presume to dictate to no man what he shall eat or drink or wherewithal he shall be clothed."
    -- The Hon. Stuart Ruaidri Erskine, The Kilt & How to Wear It, 1901.

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  3. #22
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    14th November 23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Patty Logan View Post
    What about to the red strip?
    The kilt maker sent that one along as well, but the red didn’t really stand out, and to me it looked the most lawn-chairs of all the options.

  4. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pleater View Post
    Th apron and fell are often pleated to create a definite feature of the sett in the centre front and back, so that if the waist is narrowed or enlarged that feature, or sometimes pair of features moves off centre.
    Once you see it it can really stand out - a pair of stripes or bands, a particularly vivid band, if not centred makes the whole garment look lopsided.

    Anne the Pleater
    Thank you, Anne. I got it. You are right.
    Greg

    Kilted for comfort, difference, look, variety and versatility

  5. #24
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    18th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by GG View Post
    Really? If done at both sides, it shouldn't do anything with the centre of the back - or am I wrong?
    At least with my own kilts (due to weight variations) and the kilts of the Pipe Bands I've been in, kilts have been made larger or smaller by the simple expedient of moving the buckle(s) on the wearer's right side.

    The apron isn't being altered. So when the right-hand buckle (or pair of buckles) is moved further back (towards the back of the kilt's centre-line) to make the kilt smaller, or moved further forward (towards the under-apron) to make the kilt bigger, when the kilt is worn with the upper apron centred the back of the kilt is thrown off.

    For sure this is far from ideal and the proper way to do it would be to rebuild the kilt, or better yet get a new kilt. (Kiltmakers I've known would much rather make a kilt from scratch than take an existing kilt all apart and re-build it.)

    Nevertheless with kilts like mine, without belt-loops and pleated to the stripe, the back of the kilt has no centre-line to be thrown off.

    Last edited by OC Richard; Yesterday at 05:08 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  6. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pleater View Post
    The apron and fell are often pleated to create a definite feature of the sett in the centre front and back, so that if the waist is narrowed or enlarged that feature, or sometimes pair of features moves off centre.
    Once you see it it can really stand out - a pair of stripes or bands, a particularly vivid band, if not centred makes the whole garment look lopsided.
    I think that's why the vast majority of pipe bands have their kilts pleated to the stripe: the kilts are constantly being taken in and let out to fit generation after generation of band members.

    I know of bands that have been wearing the same tartan since the 1950s. Who knows how many times those kilts have been altered!
    Last edited by OC Richard; Yesterday at 04:38 PM.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  7. #26
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    I’m a fan of that tartan (hence the avatar).

    I like the blue stripe best, fwiw.

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