Jeff brought up a very good point about the Bull Denims.
I make kilts from them all the time. Both the heavy weight in 14-16oz range and the medium weight in the 9-13oz range.
If it were not for the over lift of my industrial machine they would not be able to be sewn. for example - When attaching the waistband, there are in places, between 6 and 8 layers of fabric in the pleats. The waistband is 4 layers. There are 2 layers of interfacing. and where you jump a beltloop it adds 4 more.
Those 18 layers add up to, on average, between 3/8" and 1/2" of fabric. My first Bull Denim kilt cost me 6 broken needles on the waistband alone.
Then, when finished, a 2" pleat kilt in waist of 36", hip of 42" and drop of 23" weighs 7.28 lbs.
This kilt looks awsome when first finished. Then you wash it the first time and need to spend 40 min. ironing it back into shape.
Even with 6.68 yards of fabric a bull Denim kilt will not swish. The fabric is just too bulky. It moves much better than a duck canvas one, but nothing like a looser weave wool kilt.
I'm not trying to discourage you from making a Bull Denim Kilt, but I would never attampt to wear one and pass it off a formal wear. (call me a heretic but I think the pic of the UK's with tux jackets is just WRONG!)
If you still want to make a Bull Denim Kilt I will help in any way I can. (and I'm sure Jeff will offer the same) just PM us. I love my Bull denim kilts. I work in them. I wear them much of the time while in the shop. But never with a jacket and tie.
What I'm saying is, know your intended use for the kilt. Know your machine's capabilities. Have fun.
Steve Ashton
www.freedomkilts.com
Skype (webcam enabled) thewizardofbc
I wear the kilt because: Swish + Swagger = Swoon.
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