-
14th August 16, 03:49 AM
#1
fashion at World Championships 2016
As someone who has spent just shy of 40 years in the Pipe Band scene, I've seen the evolution not only of the technology and style of music but also in the style of dress.
Yesterday was the World Pipe Band Championships in Glasgow, and like so many pipe band people the world over, if we weren't there in person we were watching the BBC live streaming. Our band like so many others had a Worlds Viewing Party.
I'm always interested in how bands dress. Back when I started bands either wore Full Dress, with feather bonnets and all, or Evening Dress, with Prince Charlies, tartan hose, buckled shoes, and all.
Then beginning around 1980 all the bands dumped that stuff and went to a simpler, more comfortable, and far less expensive dress, the Argyll jacket/ghillies/white hose/glengarry/hunting sporran/glengarry look which was the standard for decades.
Now things have changed a bit. Dark hose have replaced white hose and waistcoats have replaced jackets.
Yesterday there were 12 bands in the Grade One Finals. They were from Scotland, Northern Ireland, The Republic of Ireland, Canada, and New Zealand.
I took screen shots (sorry for the image quality) so that we could take a look at how the bands dressed.
Starting with the Scottish bands, here is Inveraray & District. They had an incredible meteoric rise from a group of kid beginners to Grade One.
As you see they combine a mid-grey waistcoat with a grey seal Evening sporran. I really like the juxtaposition of the royal blue bag-covers with the grey tweed, much more striking in person. Like every other Grade One Finalist they wore Glengarries, waistcoats, no jackets, longsleeved shirts, ghillies, and dark hose. They wear a nice soft Ancient green/blue tartan as you see.

The only other band to wear seal Evening sporrans was another Scottish band, Shotts & Dykehead. They've been a top band for a half-century at least. Note the lovely tartan in Weathered Colours. They, and most pipe bands the world over, wear black Barathea waistcoats with silver square buttons, the sort you would wear with an Argyll jacket.


Scottish Power wear a lovely seafoam-green tartan and elaborate sporrans by Grant of Edinburgh (who make sporrans with clan crests, US military emblems, etc)

Here's one of several lefthanded pipers there yesterday, and a better view of the tartan and the sporran. Note the Royal Stewart drone cords, having colours alien to the rest of the uniform.

The crowd favourite perhaps was Spirit Of Scotland, which is not a fulltime pipe band, but something of a concept band, being a collection of the world's top solo players who don't play in bands who got together a few years ago as a one-off to play at the Worlds, in kit from Hire Shops. (That iteration wore Isle Of Skye.)
This time out they're wearing Spirit Of Scotland tartan, which is subtle and lovely but as you can see isn't an ideal band tartan. Band tartans are seen en masse and at distance and work better with bold colours and patterns. Here the kilts don't really appear to be tartan at all. On the right is Gordon Walker, one of the world's top pipers and widely viewed as the best-dressed piper.

You have to get closer to see the lovely subtle colours of Spirit Of Scotland. They were the only band of the 12 Finalists to wear leather Day sporrans.

How their kilts were pleated. No subtlety in the colours of the drums!

Now to finish off the Scottish bands, here are the two Scottish Police bands who made the Finals.
First is Greater Glasgow Police. This band has a long and brilliant history, their name changing with every restructuring of the Police force. For decades they were Glasgow Police, then Strathclyde Police, now Greater Glasgow Police. In piping circles they're simply known as 'police'. Note that Police bands in Scotland do not wear police uniforms, but are dressed the same as the other bands.
Their St Andrews Blue hose made them stand out from the dull black, charcoal, and navy hose of the other bands. Their waiscoats, I think, are navy blue tweed. Surprising that only now do we encounter a band wearing the black Hunting sporran with chrome top, which as become the standard sporran for bands and pipers the world over.

Our last Scottish band will be Police Scotland Fife. Their kilts had a strange wrinkly look on screen, I don't know if they were actually wrinkled or it was something else going on.
Last edited by OC Richard; 14th August 16 at 04:35 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
-
The Following 10 Users say 'Aye' to OC Richard For This Useful Post:
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks