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11th February 06, 02:57 PM
#1
Knife pleated kilts: 4 yds vs 5 yds
Some retailers offer a 4-yard knife pleated kilt while others offer a 5-yard knife pleated kilt. Is there a difference in the construction of the kilts? Or is this just a matter of salesmenship?
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11th February 06, 03:24 PM
#2
Bill, I am sure one of our resident experts will chime in, but I think that the actual amount of material used is determined by:
A: size of the gentleman
B: size of the sett
C: type of pleating, sett or stripe
D: and depth of pleats
I think that some of it might be advertising, but the terms 4 yd, 5yd, 8yd, etc. are really more averages than actual specific lengths of fabric. At least I think that is the case. And if not, I need to re-read Barb's book!
The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long
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11th February 06, 03:48 PM
#3
If you are fairly thin then it is possible to make a kilt from 4 yarns of material which might look alright in a fairly heavy cloth. It will not be very traditional unless you go for a box pleat
The more material the better, though, if you are aiming for a quality knife pleated garment. With extra cloth there is the posibility of deeper pleats at the edge of the apron, apron shaping, and deeper pleats all across the back. Even 5 yards might look a bit skimpy on some figures.
The amount of material required for an adequately pleated kilt is rather surprising - the first kilt I made I just could not believe that all that fabric was going to be necessary - and then I had to add in a bit to extend the under apron.
Buy yourself a pack of safety pins and tear up an old sheet into 2 ft wide strips, either across or along should not matter, and see if you can fold 4, 5 or whatever yards into a kilt for yourself. Pin top and bottom, iron to smooth the pleats then remove the pins from the bottom and wrap it around yourself.
A kilt maker can give it sharp creases, and shape the waist, but they can't magic in extra length.
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12th February 06, 10:59 AM
#4
Originally Posted by KiltedCodeWarrior
I think that some of it might be advertising, but the terms 4 yd, 5yd, 8yd, etc. are really more averages than actual specific lengths of fabric. At least I think that is the case. And if not, I need to re-read Barb's book!
I understand the yardage of a kilt is based on averages. I am wondering if a 4-yard kilt lacks something that is present on a 5-yard kilt.
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12th February 06, 11:10 AM
#5
Originally Posted by billmcc
I understand the yardage of a kilt is based on averages. I am wondering if a 4-yard kilt lacks something that is present on a 5-yard kilt.
a yard of fabric, perhaps????
sorry couldnt resist - you can kill me later
ITS A KILT, G** D*** IT!
WARNING: I RUN WITH SCISSORS
“I asked Mom if I was a gifted child… she said they certainly wouldn’t have paid for me."
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12th February 06, 11:29 AM
#6
FOr us, it was a balancing act... how much material is enough without being too expensive.
When we started making our "5 yard wool" kilt, we were trying different lengths of fabric on a guy my size (39" waist). We wanted to give the best kilt for the money. We had a pricepoint in mind ($350... between our Semi Trad and Premier) and wanted to have a "good kilt at that price". 4 yards seemed to be (IMHO) OK for me, but our average customer's waist is a 44 (actually 43.8 if you take the average of our custom orders). They'd probably need a little more fabric.
Since 4 yards was a bit too little and 6 yards would push the price up a bit, we made our kilts 5 yards. It's still not as nice of a swing or pleat depth as our Premiers (7.5 to 9 yards), but for $350, it's a pretty solid wool kilt.
I hope that sheds some light on the situation from the USAK angle.
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13th February 06, 11:11 PM
#7
Rocky, I gotta tell you. Even though I've been feeling rather blah lately (caught a cold) and a bit down that I haven't been to the pool in a while to exercise, hearing that I am well below the average customer's waist size makes me feel so good right now.
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14th February 06, 08:01 AM
#8
Glassman, I'll second that! Especially when we are talking about true waist measurements and not the fake pants sizes!
The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long
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