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29th October 06, 09:05 AM
#11
Originally Posted by Chef
Agreed it is a great jacket. Very similar to the white one I have and they do work great with kilts.
However I am not sure that a USMC Ball is the right place to be using a uniform jacket in a way other than designed and a NAVY one at that! With the USMC tartan I think that would be a faux pas.
If there is no military insignia and the buttons have been replaced (which is very easily done with this jacket) it is no longer a uniform item and can be worn by anyone. The addition of square pewter buttons would make it almost indistinguishable from a PC. Marine SNCO's have a similar jacket for dinner dress. The problem with that is it has red bordered epaulettes and is a dark blue vice black and would stand out as a uniform item. As far as being a "Navy" item, remember, the USMC is part of the Department of the Navy.
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29th October 06, 10:48 AM
#12
So what is your connection to the USMC?
If you are a civillian the Navy Jacket would still be OK if you changed the buttons and removed all of the colored piping (gold trim) and shoulder boards. Oddly it is the buttons and trim that makes an otherwise civillian coat into a uniform anyway.
If you are reserves or active military you will have to wear the uniform as close to regulation as possable with a kilt. There are dozens of photographs of Sergeants Major wearing the kilt with their dress uniforms so it can be done. The Army Band has pipers in kilts but there is no regulation allowing them (SGMs & pipers) to wear the kilt, then again there isn't any prohibitation on the kilt in the regs either.
If you are a retiree wear what you want. Retirees fall into the grey area of being both civillians and military at the same time and neither. US Federal law allows veterians to wear the uniform. Not just today's uniform but the one that you wore historically even though that would be against regulations. So that effectively (by law) retirees are NOT subject to regulations.
Last edited by Sir Robert; 29th October 06 at 10:51 AM.
Reason: spelling
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29th October 06, 11:23 AM
#13
Aye GatorUK,
Just saw a bumper sticker that pointed out that the Marines were a department of the Navy....THE MEN'S DEPARTMENT....
Semper Fi,
Ron
E-1 '65-'66
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
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29th October 06, 02:28 PM
#14
Originally Posted by GatorUK
As far as being a "Navy" item, remember, the USMC is part of the Department of the Navy.
Don't tell that to the marine Corps.
I agree if the jacket is "demilitarised" it is not a uniform and so may be worn by anyone. My point is while I think the jacket is a great idea (I own a white mess dress one myself) , I think it is better suited for a civillian gathering where most will not realise you are wearing a uniform jacket.
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30th October 06, 05:17 AM
#15
Overlap
The problem is that there is a lot of overlap between formal civillian wear and formal dress uniforms. There is a lot of incest here as uniforms follow civillian styles and civillians follow... you guessed it, military styles.
Take a good look at scottish men's jackets and you will see a link to military jackets.
The afore mentioned uniform company also makes "Ike" jackets for civilian police use. No if
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30th October 06, 06:14 AM
#16
Originally Posted by Sir Robert
The problem is that there is a lot of overlap between formal civillian wear and formal dress uniforms. There is a lot of incest here as uniforms follow civillian styles and civillians follow... you guessed it, military styles.
Take a good look at scottish men's jackets and you will see a link to military jackets.
The afore mentioned uniform company also makes "Ike" jackets for civilian police use. No if
Very true, my favourite jacket is a Montrose and there is no doubt about it's military roots, but while the military roots are obvious in many formal kilt jackets they are just as obviously civilian.
As a side point I have an Ike jacket and it works wonderfully with a kilt as well.
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30th October 06, 02:25 PM
#17
i was thinking of doing alans conversion for a Jacket... would that be a no no?
Alexis did make the kilt
as for pics they will be up when the ensamble is together!
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30th October 06, 03:13 PM
#18
If it is a ball, I would at least do the eton jacket conversion with a tailor. An Argyle type jacket will likely look underdressed. A proper Prince Charlie would still be the best. Check out local Scottish shops near you, a lot of them will rent the jacket and waistcoat for a decent fee. There are also a lot fo shops that do online rentals. Cheaper than buying one, especially if you don't think it will get a lot of use after this event.
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30th October 06, 04:06 PM
#19
i was withthe unit for 4 years and not one of them have a clue
no local scottish shops near me
on order is a fur sporran
what color for the jacket?
blue? black?
theres no white anywhere but the shirt....
how do i tie that in?
im wearing the green hose/tartan flashes
and green caubeen
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30th October 06, 08:29 PM
#20
Here's an on-line rental place you might try. They are here in Colorado Springs but I haven't been by there. Not sure if they have a store front but probably not. They do have a phone number you can call.
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