Hey, been thinking of that too. I'm up here in the Rezlands, right next to the Navajo Nation and I travel to the Hopi reservation a lot.
Here's a pic of Hopi buffalo dancers wearing a garment they translate from the Hopi to English as "kilt" - the two guys in the buffalo head dress. The men weave their own kilts up here. More often they're white with black, green, and red designs. Even though they're not pleated like a Scottish kilt, they're called kilts.



Rare to get a pic of a Hopi dance. My lady got this at her work and it was okay with the Hopi because of the venue, wasn't a sacred dance.

The Navajo people call themselves Dine'. Pronounced like the din in dinner followed by eh like a Canadian ends a sentence.

Sometimes the deerskin skirts some Navajo warriors wore a long time ago are called kilts.

But more than likely a Navajo has some Scot blood in him. I've had many come up to me and say they're 1/4 Scot or Irish and ask about my kilt. A former Navajo girlfriend says Navajo women don't much like Navajo men and prefer to date and marry other races. The Navajo culture has historically been open to other races and other tribes. You'll find a Navajo town called Cameron, and a Navajo Nation former president named MacDonald.

I've been wondering if a person could take the colors from various local Navajo rug styles and use them in a tartan. Sort of Navajo district tartans since blanket styles are regional around the rezlands. Or take the colors of the Navajo Nation flag and weave a tartan of them.





Figure it'd be presumptious for a Bilagaana (Navajo for Anglo) to do that. But the natural dyed colors of the wool in Navajo rugs would make some beautiful tartans. I bought some local dyed Navajo wool at the trading post for Dred to use in my Dredbelly tam.

One could probably make a sharp looking tartan out of the common Hopi colors of white, red, green, and black...but again presumptous for a Bowana (Hopi for Anglo...I think...)

Ron