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  1. #1
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Redshank View Post
    it's all very confusing for us simple scotsfolk, I guess we live and learn
    Sometimes I get so confused that I begin to think that the kilt was invented in the USA!

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jock Scot View Post
    Sometimes I get so confused that I begin to think that the kilt was invented in the USA!
    Only at Xmarks.

    MrBill
    Very Sir Lord MrBill the Essential of Happy Bottomshire
    Listen to kpcw.org

    Every other Saturday 1-4 PM

  3. #3
    Join Date
    6th July 07
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    Quote Originally Posted by mbhandy View Post
    Only at Xmarks.

    MrBill
    If you say so!
    Last edited by Jock Scot; 14th February 10 at 08:51 AM.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jock Scot View Post
    Sometimes I get so confused that I begin to think that the kilt was invented in the USA!
    No, just Reborn

  5. #5
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    18th October 09
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    I listened for several hours at a solo piping competition yesterday, and boy did it jump out to my eye how, on several pipers who had their waistbelts shoved through the belt loops on their kilts, the back of their kilts resembled the Golden Gate Bridge's cables (like the McDonald's arches inverted).

    Shortly afterwards I was talking to a Scottish guy who owns a kilt shop, and I noticed that he himself had his waistbelt shoved through his loops.

    I myself order kilts with two buckles and no loops! It's the way kilts should be in my opinion.

    Hmmm.... why don't they make those loops really small so that you can only put your sporran strap through them...

  6. #6
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jock Scot View Post
    Sometimes I get so confused that I begin to think that the kilt was invented in the USA!
    Actually most of us hereabouts learned the lesson of the sporran loops from Elsie Stuehmeyer and her amanuensis Barb T. Elsie learned it from Thomas Gordon's in Glasgow. And the wheel keeps turning...
    Ken Sallenger - apprentice kiltmaker, journeyman curmudgeon,
    gainfully unemployed systems programmer

  7. #7
    NorCalPiper is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    Momma is in her mid-60's, so this phenomena has been around for at least that long. I've spoken to her since I posted for her further thoughts. She states that the tradition of belt wearing stems from the kilt becoming civilian clothing other than regimental. She sites that regimental kilts should rise to the arc of the rib cage to accommodate the military doublet, and the belt being fastened around the doublet. Her thoughts are that when the kilt left the regimental arena and began to take popularity in the populace, the waist came down to the navel for comfort sake, and accessorizing meant non-military style coats that could remain open if need be (Argyll jackets, etc.). THe belt and its buckle gained whole new meaning from this. Belts were not needed to carry swords or pistols. She stated that lowering the length to near the waist creates issues with the small of the back (Military cut kilts are 2-3 inches above this area, thus not affected). Dr.Tewks talks about this issue in her book, but my mother feels that inevitably a kilt losses that perfect fit and a belt is necessary. I told her about the sagging "U" thats created by this, and she said that if that is happening then both end of the kilt loops are sewn to the pleat and not one end up into the top band. She even challenged me to find a picture of a kilt that has "proper" loops done that has the sag. ANyone?

  8. #8
    Join Date
    18th October 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by NorCalPiper View Post
    ...regimental kilts should rise to the arc of the rib cage to accommodate the military doublet, and the belt being fastened around the doublet. Her thoughts are that when the kilt left the regimental arena and began to take popularity in the populace, the waist came down to the navel...
    She's probably bang-on.

    In the US pipe band scene many of the players, esp younger ones, insist on shoving the kilt down around the hips so that the bottom of the kilt comes to the top of the hose, hiding the knees.

    Some doublet makers have responded by making their doublets far longer in the waist than military doublets properly are.

    Here's a clear photo of the proper height of the waist of a military doublet, worn by a private of the Cameron Highlanders. The kilt must be high-waisted as well.



    Here's a modern Scottish army doublet showing this high waist:



    Here's a doublet probably made in India or Pakistan with an absurdly long waist:



    I wonder if it was made that way out of ignorance, or because US clients were asking for them to be that way.

  9. #9
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    30th May 09
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    Quote Originally Posted by OC Richard View Post
    I wonder if it was made that way out of ignorance, or because US clients were asking for them to be that way.
    Why can't it be both?

  10. #10
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    I just saw about 50 kilties go through the Edinburgh airport this weekend (they were going to the Scotland- Wales game, I presume), and about half of them had that wierd twin distortion of pleats below the belt loops. Through my food poisoning-induced fog, I wondered why my kilts didn't suffer the same affliction. My head's a lot clearer now, and I realize it's because I don't use the belt loops for anything.

    When I ordered my (very) first kilt from Matt Newsome, I asked about belt loops and he convinced me they weren't necessary, although he patiently supplied belt loop blanks should I have felt the need to add them later. Of course he was right, they were not necessary on my now most-favored kilt. When I asked another kilt maker about not adding belt loops to an 8 yard kilt I ordered, she said she wouldn't make them without loops and that they should always be used. Hmmm . . . still not using them, not even for the sporran straps, and with great success.

    Abax

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