Kilt Hang Drying - Rack, Hangers and clothespins.
I built this drying rack before my kilted days. It is made out of a cheap plastic 5 foot, 5 shelf rack kit, a length of PVC pipe, 2 low velocity (7 Watt) 4 inch boxer (equipment) fans, 2 switches - one is a one hour timer switch, and miscellaneous items I had in my "treasure room"(junk).
I only used the feet, 2 racks and the post pieces of the kit. The top post piece is rounded to accept the weight of the PVC pipe and it's cargo. The pipe is attached with steel plumbers tape and screws. The lateral load is taken on the right end by the pipe end fitting into a hole in the piece of trim board braded to the wall (small holes). The left end is steadied by a steel plumbers tape strap affixed to the ceiling where a joist is behind it ( my ceiling is only 7 foot high).
The upper shelf has the fans (attached with zip ties) and the switches and wiring ( the switches are single pole. wired in parallel - connections are soldered and heat shrink insulated for the potentially drippy clothes)
The bottom shelf holds the laundry basket or the two undercounter baskets pictured that I later found - now have 3 baskets to presort clothes as I take them off.
All the "junk" on and around the rack are for speciic non kilt clothes ( the KFC chicken bucket is my Tilly hat drying rack, the upside down wood piece leaning against the wall is for drying shoes -- etc.)
Using this rack and the rest of the stuff, It takes me less than 7 minutes to get a kilt from the washer, lay it out, put it on the clip hangers, put them on the third hanger on rack then straighten and pin the pleats and get back on the couch with a nice beverage.
About all kilts except the Utilikit Workmans are bone dry in 3-4 hours, the denim and duck Workmans take 8 hours to overnight. I almost never have to press a Utilikit or PV traditional.

I bought a box of 100 of these 14" heavy (jumbo) duty, swivel, 2 clip hangers. With 2, 3 or 4 clips they hold any cloth kilt well - wet or dry - and spread the load around so the pleats store flat. It's easy to scavenge clips from one hanger for another hanger. For the drying rack I have 5 clips on one and 6 on the other hanger. These were originally for Utilikilts, it seemes to handle all the kilts well. I then hang it on the third swivel hanger which has movable binder clips on its spine to space the front and back of the kilt apart as needed allowing it to hang in a more "on your body" manner and open the interior up to good airflow from the fans. This third swivel allows you to spin the kilt around for the pinning and straightening process.

Depending on the kilt and type fabric I use weighted or unweighted wooden clothes pins. These are made with half ounce and one ounce swivel fishing weights easily strung on the spring wire of the clothespins - after you get the technique down
The center pictured are the ones using the single 1 oz weights as they need to lay close together for reverse kingesse? and box pleats where two pleat knife edges come together.The single weight will push the pins together keeping them straight.
I only pin the outer knife edges together and to the single layer of the next pleat fabric since I straighten the back pleats by a slight tug as I am pinning. This shortens the drying time a lot. After all is pinned, I run my finger down inside each pleat top to bottom to insure there are no rumples. Turn the fans on and walk away.

Warning, If you have females in the house you may have to remove their undies and clothes from the rack to hang your kilt
It will be real popular for all clothes. It is a lot quicker and better than having them strung all over the bathroom - isn't it?
slàinte mhath, Chuck
Originally Posted by MeghanWalker,In answer to Goodgirlgoneplaids challenge:
"My sporran is bigger and hairier than your sporran"
Pants is only a present tense verb here. I once panted, but it's all cool now.
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