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7th January 06, 09:58 AM
#1
What's under my kilt you ask?
Well, it is not my Underkilt from J'DEZ.
Anyone else having a problem of slow or no shipping from J'DEZ?
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7th January 06, 10:26 AM
#2
What's under my kilt
I learned about the underkilt on this forum and tried to order one from jdez but my e-mail came back about a week later undelivered.
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7th January 06, 10:52 PM
#3
Did they take your money and then not deliver or did the transaction not go through at all?
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8th January 06, 04:03 AM
#4
What's under the kilt
In my case they didn't take the money - transaction didn't go through at all.
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8th January 06, 06:45 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Wingbiker
Well, it is not my Underkilt from J'DEZ.
Anyone else having a problem of slow or no shipping from J'DEZ?
WOW, that stinks..
By the way, welcome to the forum!
[B]Paul Murray[/B]
Kilted in Detroit! Now that's tough.... LOL
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8th January 06, 06:57 AM
#6
To balance things-I've had excellent service from them.
James
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8th January 06, 04:46 PM
#7
Had good service too...did take a while since I wanted black and they send the white ones out to be dyed...
Ron
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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8th January 06, 05:00 PM
#8
Not to kick off the "is the underkilt really a slip" thing again, but to a bunch of guys willing to tackle sewing an actual kilt, wouldn't knocking up a....let's phrase this carefully...supplemental kilt liner (yeah, that's the ticket!) be easy cheese? I mean, you could find a manly fabric like flannel and set it up so that it was shorter enough than the actual exterior kilt that it would be pretty inconspicuous...might help those in extreme climates who seem to worry about this and make some of the lighter weight kilts wearable in less than perfect weather.
Best
AA
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8th January 06, 05:05 PM
#9
Some terri-coth and a couple of safety pins would probably do the same job.
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9th January 06, 06:42 PM
#10
 Originally Posted by auld argonian
Not to kick off the "is the underkilt really a slip" thing again, but to a bunch of guys willing to tackle sewing an actual kilt, wouldn't knocking up a....let's phrase this carefully...supplemental kilt liner (yeah, that's the ticket!) be easy cheese? I mean, you could find a manly fabric like flannel and set it up so that it was shorter enough than the actual exterior kilt that it would be pretty inconspicuous...might help those in extreme climates who seem to worry about this and make some of the lighter weight kilts wearable in less than perfect weather.
Now why hadn't we thought about that before? Great idea. In the UnderKilt debates, someone came up with a variation and posted a drawing of it. I tried to look around thru the old posts, but I couldn't find it. It was like the UnderKilt but with large cut-outs on the sides. If I owned a sewing machine, I might tackle matching such a thing. It can't be hard, right?
-ian
Last edited by furrycelt; 9th January 06 at 06:49 PM.
Reason: typos
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