Rex,

I have found that most times when a guys privates come in contact with a chair, he needs to get a kilt the is worn at mid or high rise. It fact, I much prefer my own kilts there.

This is also why I developed the slope measurement for my kilts. By making the back of the kilt longer and the front shorter you get a kilt with a perfectly level hem when standing and almost never run out of hem when sitting. It also eliminates the pucker of the front apron that is so unsightly.

There have been three times when a customer has noticed a short back hem when sitting. On all three occasions the customer had large thighs. This caused the kilt to pull forward when he sat and ride up in back. The problem was solved each time by remaking the kilt with a mid rise and increasing the slope.

To me a "Beer Gut Cut" does the same thing, I just don't believe in charging extra to make a kilt fit properly. So I include a slope measurement on EVERY kilt I make.