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22nd February 06, 08:11 AM
#1
And I'll chime in that I had a similar concern when I received the Donegal tweed kilt from Matt last week with no belt loops. But after wearing it all day Monday, there were no problems. Belt stayed put with no problems.
The kilt concealed a blaster strapped to his thigh. Lazarus Long
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22nd February 06, 08:25 AM
#2
Using belt loops can be a bad thing. A couple of days ago, my wife told me that I had a lump or something in the fabric, near the top of the kilt (below the belt); it turned out that the belt was pushing up at the top of the loop, thereby pulling up the bottom of the loop, and deforming how the fabric hung. It wasn't evident at first, because my sporran strap was outside of the loops and covered where the loop was pulling the fabric up.
I'll just not use the loops anymore; I hadn't at first anyway, but was trying it with the loops to see if there was any difference. I guess there was!
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22nd February 06, 09:33 AM
#3
None of the loops on my Bear kilts were big enough for a Kilt belt and my traditional doesn't have any loops. I always (after some good advise from Todd and Hamish) just wore the belt over the kilt. I never had any issue with the belt moving out of place.
I have found that the kilts that sit on the hips often need a belt to help out, where as a traditional kilt seems to sit just fine without a belt.
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22nd February 06, 01:12 PM
#4
There, I've learned something new today. I had just htought they all had belt loops. So with hiking and climbing on rocks I should make sure kilts have loops for the belt, and BBQ afterwards.
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22nd February 06, 02:19 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by Colin
I have found that the kilts that sit on the hips often need a belt to help out, where as a traditional kilt seems to sit just fine without a belt.
Colin hit the nail on the head! I used to wear my belt through the loops of my good wool Kilt, but it pulled one of the loops loose. Now I just wrap the belt around and cinch it. It does sometimes shift a bit but never to the point of being a problem. With my Utilikilts and some of my casual "hillwalker" type kilts I do use the loops because they ride much lower on my hips but with my traditional kilts? Never.
Jamie
Quondo Omni Flunkus Moritati
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22nd February 06, 06:29 PM
#6
Thanks folks. My kilt is a traditional wool kilt which rides high on the waist. It fits perfectly fine without the belt but it just looks like there is something missing.
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22nd February 06, 07:20 PM
#7
I only wear a belt on my traditional kilts when it will show...when I'm wearing a sweater I mostly don't wear a belt.
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24th February 06, 11:15 PM
#8
Great advice all the way around....
Will we see you at any of the games this year?
Josh
(Olympia)
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26th February 06, 07:12 AM
#9
Loops on traditional kilts started out as sporran loops, actually (to keep sporrans from sliding down on someone without much of a kiester, I guess), and were much smaller than the loops put on many kilts today. As Matt said, trad kilts didn't have belt loops. There's no need for belt loops, and I don't put them on any of the kilts I make unless someone specifically asks for them.
As Iolaus said, wearing a belt through loops can distort a kilt. The next time you go to a Highland gathering, surreptitiously check out kilts with belts through loops that look like they've been worn awhile (many band kilts are like this). The bottom edge of these kilt are commonly not nice and straight - they hike up directly below the belt loops. Ugh.
Barb
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