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Thread: kilt pics

  1. #11
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    Reece, looking good!
    But damn, you've opened up a can of worms here, I got to go and get some football/rugby socks now! These type of socks although not formal attire may well be ok for casual wear.

  2. #12
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    Thank you

    I guess it takes a native to point out these are Rugby socks! Now I can get them even cheaper. They are very supportive. Now I know why.

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by kilt_nave
    I guess it takes a native to point out these are Rugby socks! Now I can get them even cheaper. They are very supportive. Now I know why.
    Cheap is good especially if the quality is there, and I know these socks will last for years.
    BTW since my last post I ordered some black ones!
    Looking good doing your own thing, cheers mate.

  4. #14
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    Kilts to Church?

    I wore my kilt to a church men's function about two years ago. Pastor joked and hinted but basically asked me not to wear it again. What kind of Church do you attend? I want to sign up.

  5. #15
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    For what it's worth, I'm an Orthodox Priest - NO ONE is more conservative than us, and I can tell you without a doubt...

    Kilts are welcome.

    Come any time.

    www.holyassumption.net if curious

  6. #16
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    Love your neighbors as yourself.

    Quote Originally Posted by JayFilomena
    Pastor joked and hinted but basically asked me not to wear it again.
    Time to move on!

    I am the minister of music at a Missouri Synod Lutheran Church. They are "conservative," but in the "Jewish" sense (i.e., liturgically not dogmatically).

    Certainly this didn't happen at a Presbyterian one...


  7. #17
    An t-Ileach's Avatar
    An t-Ileach is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    Quote Originally Posted by kilt_nave
    ...
    Certainly this didn't happen at a Presbyterian one...

    When I was a boy (it was the mention of the Presbyterian Church and your picture of Y Ddraig Goch that reminded me), at the kirk we went to (strangely in South Wales) virtually all of the congreagtion were Gaelic speaking and often "Sunday Best" meant the kilt.

    I remember a cousin and I sitting on a wall outside after the service waiting for our Grandfather (one of the Elders) and being talked to by some old bloke (he was probably all of 40 at the time!) - it was the earliest phrase I consciously remember as being in a different language from the one the kids in school used - Dè mar a tha sibh an-diugh, Alasdair, A Dhaibhidh? ("How are you today, Alexander, David?"). There was nothing unusual about the kilt in church there.

    And many years later (about 10 years ago now), I went to the funeral of an old friend of mine at Aros on Mull. It was an Episcopalian Church (he'd been a piskie): all the men were wearing the kilt, and the ladies in tartan skirts. A piper played a lament as the coffin was lowered into the grave. It was very evocative.

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