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  1. #1
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    13th November 07
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    How much tartan for a kilt?

    Alright, help a brother out..

    I'm sitting here working through my first kilt. I picked up a copy of Barb and Elsie's book (fantastic work!). However, I'm having trouble on the figuring how much tartan part. I've got plenty of tartan material, but I don't want to waste much. (BTW, it's a wool lightweight in 11oz, knife pleated to stripe.)

    I'm sure it's plain as day in the book but it's not getting through my thick skull...

    Ok, so, I've got the measurements written down and figured. However, where I run into problems is figuring how many pleats to, well, pleat. Since it's to stripe, do I only need to pleat the number needed in the width to make a sett still? If that even makes sense...

    Help!


    T.

  2. #2
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    30th October 07
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    What is the reveal of the pleat? That, the sett size and your waste size will tell you how much you need.
    For example: If I have a 42 inch hip measurement and I have 21 inches of that in the pleats, with a one inch reveal, then I will need 21 pleats. If I were to half a half-inch reveal then that'd be 42 pleats. Make sense?

  3. #3
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    Yeah.

    The waist measurement is 41". Sett is 6 and 3/8"

    I'm not sure on my reveal yet. I'd like around 1" but I'm flexable.

    So, if 1/2 my waist is in the pleats, that's 20 1/2". Reveal could be 1", so is that 20.5 pleats? Can't be that easy...

    T.

  4. #4
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    well, you're not gonna want to have a half pleat right? ANd the book suggests putting slightly more room in the back than in the front. 1" is the upper end of what you want, but if you'd like, for simplicity's sake to keep that the reveal you could make your split 20" in the front and 21" in the back. Then do 21 pleats w/ 1" reveals.

  5. #5
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    Ok, making more sense now.

    I think I'll back it off and go with 20 pleats in the back. Or, should I be using the hips measurement and go with 23 pleats?

    Thanks!

    T.

  6. #6
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    Oh sorry; I didn't catch that you were using the waist measurment. Yeah, you're gonna wanna base that all on the hip measurement
    then you find the difference between hip (a) and waist (b) measurements and divide by the number of pleats (c) and that will give you how much smaller the pleat will be at the waist. So (a-b)/c = X. That's how much smaller the reveal will be at the waist. Make sense?

  7. #7
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    I don't know. I'm following the directions, and I have read them through, it just isn't clicking in my head.

    Now, I'm on the part where it says I need 1/2 hip measurement plus 15-17" AND 1/2 hip plus 5-6" for the underapron! You gotta be kidding!? for this kilt, that's 43" to 46" AFTER the last pleat!!

    I don't think I factored that into the measurements...

    T.

  8. #8
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    7th July 06
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    You have to take into account an extra-deep first and reverse pleat (the reverse pleat is a deep box pleat on the right side), plus enough material to finish the apron edges with a hem at least 1.5-2 inches, and also have enough left for a fringe if you want that. That's what takes up the extra material.
    Convener, Georgia Chapter, House of Gordon (Boss H.O.G.)

    Where 4 Scotsmen gather there'll usually be a fifth.
    7/5 of the world's population have a difficult time with fractions.

  9. #9
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    If you have plenty of material and it is lightweight then I'd advise using lots of material.

    I've only been making kilts for a couple of years and my methods are not conventional, but I have only ever regretted not putting more material into a kilt.

    For a 42 inch hip measurement I'd go for at least 22 inches of pleats - at the hip, that is. Maybe 24 inches or even more would be better, particularly if you have got a bit of a 'bay window' in front. Its the shape, not the measurement, that is important and although the fabric will bend to accommodate the shape beneath, it is going to look better if there is enough kilt to go round the body, even if it is hanging over fresh air. You want to look dressed, not parcelled.

    The pleats are narrowed into the waist and sewn down in the conventional method, the aprons are shaped so as to be slightly wider at the lower edge - though when worn they actually hang straight, the curve of the body makes a straight apron look as though it is narrower at the bottom.

    There is a large pleat folded under the apron and under apron so that it is possible to lift your foot to tie a lace without having the aprons pull apart. There is also one more large pleat folded the other way, again for ease of movement, but also for modesty - if you sit or crouch down you want the aprons to fall between your thighs. If there is enough material the under apron can be pushed backwards so that even sitting on the ground does not provide an unfortunate photo opportunity.

    The large pleats are useful to get the sett lined up nicely on the apron, so the pattern is placed so it looks right.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    15th April 07
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    There are two ways to approach pleating. Typically traditional pleats have a 5/8" to 3/4" reveal.
    1) If you are limited by length of material, then mark the aprons, one on each end of the material. Then start marking off the pleats until you reach the apron with the appropriate spacing from the last pleat to the apron edge. You can even do this before you rip the material.

    2) Use the method in the book. (Chapter 8)
    Wallace Catanach, Kiltmaker

    A day without killting is like a day without sunshine.

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