X Marks the Scot - An on-line community of kilt wearers.
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1st August 05, 10:33 AM
#7
Hi!
Lot's has been written on this subject here on this forum. Basically, a kilt is a man's garment, and there is no such thing as a "lady's kilt". So, if you see something that looks like a kilt but is worn by a woman, you're seeing one of two things:
-If you see kilts worn by women who play the pipes or drums or compete in Scottish Highland dancing, they are wearing a traditional kilt (a man's garment) that is made exactly the same way that a kilt is made for male members of the band or for a male Highland dancer. Same construction, same opening edge, custom made, hand sewn, 7-8 yards of tartan, etc. Even the young dancers dance in kilts that are made exactly the same way that a male piper's kilt is made, although it's impossible to squeeze 7-8 yards of tartan into such a small kilt. Even so, the little dancers still have at least 5 yards of tartan in their kilts.
-If you see a woman's pleated garment of lightweight tartan that is typically below-the-knee or longer, opens on the left (rather than on the right), isn't pleated either to the stripe or to the sett, and has much less tartan than a traditional kilt, that garment is referred to as a kilt skirt or kilted skirt. It isn't a kilt.
Cheers!
Barb
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