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19th January 06, 03:22 PM
#1
Staying Power of the Kilt
Kilts Have Staying Power?
Ancient garb seems to be catching on with American men
By Dan Nephin
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Thursday, January 19, 2006
PITTSBURGH - I did a double take. Was that a guy ... in a skirt? It was at a folk-music festival, so it could have been. But the cut was wrong and the heavy black cotton twill was almost menacing. Still, the pattern, with its sharp pleats, looked familiar.
I asked the guy just what he was wearing and he handed me a business card from the maker, a Seattle company called Utilikilt. It was a kilt, but not your Uncle Angus' Black Watch plaid by any stretch, laddies.
I'm not much taken by fashion, but something about this garment appealed to me.
Fortune smiled, because a vendor at the festival was selling a slightly different version. Ninety bucks later and sporting a camouflage AmeriKilt, I joined the brotherhood.
That was more than two years ago and the brotherhood has grown, bonded by a desire to be unbound, so to speak.
Steve Villegas founded Utilikilt in 2002 after having created his own modern take on the ancient garb a couple of years before. After getting lots of compliments on his kilt, he decided to try his hand at making them professionally. The first year, he sold about 750. Now, Utilikilt sells about 13,000 kilts annually and employs about 20 people.
Since then, roughly a dozen casual kilt makers have popped up, including Ameri-Kilt, based in suburban Philadelphia.
Michael Butler, who runs AmeriKilt with his wife, Jeanne, said he had always admired the kilt, but didn't see much in the way of a casual style so he also decided to venture into business. Now, he's seen sales increase.
"We sell all over the world. I just got an order today from Bangkok, Thailand," he said recently.
What's the appeal?
For me, it was a bit of nonconformity and the natural air conditioning. And it just looked good (I wore mine with a tuxedo jacket, cummerbund and bow tie last New Year's Eve.)
"For guys, it's a sign of strength, leadership," Villegas said. "For women, they find it incredibly sexy. They love to see legs."
"It takes a man who's confident of his sexuality," he said.
Neither maker sees men in kilts as a trend.
"There's no way this can go away. Look at the history of men's clothes. How long have men's' clothes been bifurcated (garments of two legs)? That's a fad," he said, listing as pantless the ancient Romans, Vikings and, of course, the Scots.
Several kilt Web sites show all manner of men in kilts. AmeriKilt's site shows two Philadelphia Eagles sporting the garment, and Butler supplied a camo kilt to a Marine bagpiper in Iraq.
Utilikilt's site - www.utilikilts.com - also shows an array of kilt wearers including a firm of marine biologists that uses them as uniforms.
Neither kilt maker engages in much advertising. Butler says his customers find him by word of mouth, and Villegas said he doesn't do mainstream advertising.
"I think the appeal is that men just by their nature like to view themselves as individuals," Butler said.
Most AmeriKilts cost $95, and special ones like corduroy or camo are $120.Utilikilts run between about $100 and $750 for an all-leather model.
"It's heavy, it's not for everyone. There's more libido built into that garment than anything I can think of," Villegas said.
And how to answer the inevitable question of what's underneath?
"Usually," Butler says, "I point out my footwear."
Winston-Salem Journal link
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19th January 06, 06:02 PM
#2
Great find!
Hopefully it'll catch on enough to where everyone will view them as a curiosity rather than an oddity.
Ian
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19th January 06, 07:36 PM
#3
Originally Posted by ian
Hopefully it'll catch on enough to where everyone will view them as a curiosity rather than an oddity....
They might catch on if the rap singers flaunted them instead of the plumbers butt" baggy jeans.
Last edited by Blu (Ontario); 19th January 06 at 07:43 PM.
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19th January 06, 09:10 PM
#4
true but the last thing i want is to be accused of copying snoop dogg
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19th January 06, 09:40 PM
#5
Originally Posted by bmrtin
true but the last thing i want is to be accused of copying snoop dogg
Oh indeed indeed indeed!
Dee
Ferret ad astra virtus
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19th January 06, 10:07 PM
#6
Personally I'd much rather simply become an accepted variant than be trendy.
Now maybe if some nice, safe mainstream celebrity started sporting a kilt in public we'd get the kind of attention, respect & acceptance we deserve. Someone respectable yet cool. Hmmmm....
Maybe we can get Cal Ripken to wear a kilt!
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19th January 06, 11:18 PM
#7
Sherry, Thanks for posting this article. Amerikilts has a link to it, and dummy me, I never made the connection to post it here.
I think as more men wear kilts, more men will at least be willing to give it a try, especially when they see that the men that are wearing them are being treated like everyone else - except for the extra attention they get from the ladies. Not that we are suddenly going to see a kilt wearing revolution, but they will become more commonplace - and that's fine with me. Men deserve to dress comfortably, and feel at ease doing so.
Darrell
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22nd January 06, 09:46 PM
#8
Originally Posted by GlassMan
Now maybe if some nice, safe mainstream celebrity started sporting a kilt in public we'd get the kind of attention, respect & acceptance we deserve. Someone respectable yet cool. Hmmmm....
Maybe we can get Cal Ripken to wear a kilt!
Or maybe, just maybe, if we could ever get Mel Gibson & Sean Connery to wear kilts.... Or another nice mainstream celebrity like Ewan MacGregor, perhaps.
8)
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23rd January 06, 06:22 AM
#9
Originally Posted by Angus MacSpey
Or maybe, just maybe, if we could ever get Mel Gibson & Sean Connery to wear kilts.... Or another nice mainstream celebrity like Ewan MacGregor, perhaps.
8)
I have seen all of these guys wear the kilt in formal situations, as well as Kiefer Sutherland. We do need to get them to wear a kilt in an everyday situation though.
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
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