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  1. #1
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    box pleated kilt

    I probably should have asked all these questions in one thread instead of two...but the one gave rise to the others.

    So I have a shirt (several) that will work nicely with my Matt Newsome box pleated kilt. And I thank all those who responded in the shirt thread.

    What I want to know now is whether wearing a pair of non-matching tartan hose would be historically correct?

    And I am probably on shakier ground here...would a highland blue bonnet (the Jacobite style with a white cockade) be historically correct with the box pleated kilt?

    Parenthetically, what is the time frame for the box pleated kilt? Isn't the philibeg a non-sewn version of the box pleated? The forerunner? So...from what earliest date to what latest date (before it nearly disappears only to be revived recently) would one expect to see the four yard box pleated kilt being worn.
    DWFII--Traditionalist and Auld Crabbit
    In the Highlands of Central Oregon

  2. #2
    M. A. C. Newsome is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by DWFII View Post
    Parenthetically, what is the time frame for the box pleated kilt? Isn't the philibeg a non-sewn version of the box pleated? The forerunner? So...from what earliest date to what latest date (before it nearly disappears only to be revived recently) would one expect to see the four yard box pleated kilt being worn.
    The earliest tailored kilt that has been documented is a Gordon Highlanders regimental kilt from 1794. It was just over 3 yards in length and was box pleated to the stripe.

    It was also the Gordon Highlanders who were the first military regiment to switch over to knife pleating some 60 years later in 1854.

    So the "era of the four yard box pleated kilt" is anywhere from the late eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth century.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by DWFII View Post
    I probably should have asked all these questions in one thread instead of two...but the one gave rise to the others.

    So I have a shirt (several) that will work nicely with my Matt Newsome box pleated kilt. And I thank all those who responded in the shirt thread.

    What I want to know now is whether wearing a pair of non-matching tartan hose would be historically correct?

    And I am probably on shakier ground here...would a highland blue bonnet (the Jacobite style with a white cockade) be historically correct with the box pleated kilt?

    Parenthetically, what is the time frame for the box pleated kilt? Isn't the philibeg a non-sewn version of the box pleated? The forerunner? So...from what earliest date to what latest date (before it nearly disappears only to be revived recently) would one expect to see the four yard box pleated kilt being worn.
    Matt answered re: the kilt itself. As for the knitted blue (plain blue, without the dicing, i.e. civilian style) bonnet, you see them in paintings of Highlanders right through the 1800s. The only difference from the Jacobite version is that the pom-pom (tourie) gets bigger, and the headband portion wider. Arlen's wife Dianne knits them:
    http://russetlodgeknits.blogspot.com...n-bonnets.html

    Also,the knitted "tams" sold by numerous vendors today are just like the 19th C. bonnet:
    http://www.scottishlion.com/catalog/...lain-Beret-Tam

    Non-matching tartan hose? Sure, but most 19th C. images (of civilians) seem to reveal a switch to knitted hose like we wear today (plain colored or 'argyll') as opposed to sewn tartan hose. The soldiers still wore their red & white diced hose....
    Last edited by Woodsheal; 24th July 09 at 02:09 PM.
    Brian

    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." ~ Benjamin Franklin

  4. #4
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    How about this?

    DWFII--Traditionalist and Auld Crabbit
    In the Highlands of Central Oregon

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by DWFII View Post
    How about this?

    Perfect...!
    Brian

    "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." ~ Benjamin Franklin

  6. #6
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    From some paintings I've seen, the more tartans, the merrier!

    Personally, I think different tartans worn together looks kind of funny, but in those days, they didn't seem to have the same fashion sense as today.
    --dbh

    When given a choice, most people will choose.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by piperdbh View Post
    From some paintings I've seen, the more tartans, the merrier!

    Personally, I think different tartans worn together looks kind of funny, but in those days, they didn't seem to have the same fashion sense as today.
    That was going to be my comment, as well. I've seen paintings of Jacobites wearing one tartan in their kilt and tartan hose, and a totally different tartan for their jacket- with a third tartan accenting the cuffs of the sleeve! Way I see it, they regarded these garments as just clothes. They wore what they needed to wear. I like to wear an English doublet with my kilt from time to time. I get a little greif for it, so my backstory is that I killed an Englishman and took it from him to keep myself warm.
    "Two things are infinite- the universe, and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." Albert Einstein.

  8. #8
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    "So...from what earliest date to what latest date (before it nearly disappears only to be revived recently) would one expect to see the four yard box pleated kilt being worn."

    Not before Tuesday and never after Sunday.
    Steve Ashton
    www.freedomkilts.com
    Skype (webcam enabled) thewizardofbc
    I wear the kilt because:
    Swish + Swagger = Swoon.

  9. #9
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    ...as long as you don't wear white hose after Labor Day...

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by The Wizard of BC View Post
    "So...from what earliest date to what latest date (before it nearly disappears only to be revived recently) would one expect to see the four yard box pleated kilt being worn."

    Not before Tuesday and never after Sunday.


    All right, you have convinced me. The box pleated kilt is not traditional, it is a modern, historical revival style of kilt.

    Thanks Wizard.
    I tried to ask my inner curmudgeon before posting, but he sprayed me with the garden hose…
    Yes, I have squirrels in my brain…

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