I'm looking forward to your posts with pics of you in the suit, BK! ...in public, of course! That peak lapel really makes that second suit!Baron Kurtz said:I'm thinking it'd be the kind of thing to liven up a dinner suit, but maybe not.
I'd go with the all-tartan suit, myself.
bk
That's a great jacket, Feraud. You are a man of inestimable taste. That looks like a fun night, too. What was the occasion?Feraud said:Slightly off topic but.. there is the J Press Blackwatch jacket. I found one new w/tags for 25 bucks.
Here is a RL tux jacket.
Smithy said:I agree entirely with you Alan. I wouldn't be comfortable wearing something which I haven't earnt or have no entitlement to do so. There's a similar thing happening back home where a lot of Maori are getting very annoyed with non-Maoris going off and getting traditional Maori tattoos (Te moko). It's even more confounding when it's someone who isn't even from NZ.
Speaking of tartans, I can wear the Gordon or Colquhoun, much prefer the Colquhoun tartan though.
kiltie said:I'm new in these parts, so I don't want to roil the waters too much, but I can't resist here. Clan tartans as we know them today are really and honestly a bunch of hooey for the most part. Consider this: in the old days, there simply were no means to replicate such an intricate pattern en masse. That said, there were certain dyes that were likely more identifiable with certain regions. I wanna say the Gordons were the first to actually come up with anything akin to uniformity. I wish I had my facts to cite at my fingertips, but you see my time stamp. Anywhos, you'll have fun researching this next bit: I wasn't until the eighteen hundreds that the uniformity amongst those outside the military gained any popularity. This, like the eight yards of material that people recognise as a kilt today, was a British invention, and, as I recall, a commercial one at that. Supposedly some sort of book or roll was found ( I forget by whom ) that was a sort of template for all these tartans, and these entreprenuers could get you all hooked up with your roots if you'd buy their swag - and it stuck. In any event, there are about eight zillion variations of about fifty zillion tartans. Obviously there'd be no way of keeping track of the Hunting, Ancient, Modern, etc... variations of tartans.
A lot of the regiments were founded by landed folks ( MacKenzie, Gordon, Cameron, etc... ) and adopted those tartans, but here we come back to British invention. The things ( the bagpipes, kilt, Scots Gaelic...) that were proscripted were allowed back to those who would join the army. And that they did. So deep was the Highlanders love for those things that he joined the army of his oppressor to regain them, but in a bastardised form - a swatch material in place of the great kilt, regimental tunes, etc...All British inventions.
Many will dispute this, thinking they are doing so out of ancestral pride. I have roots in Scotland, but my head is not in the clouds. All you have to do is look at all the other cultures the Empire distorted.
If there were any sort of rules about such things, I'd think they ( the tartans ) wouldn't be widely available. I wear the MacGregor Hunting, as that is my lineage. However, when we started our pipe band we had little money and we figured we could save on one kilt by getting everyone else one like mine. Now we all wear the MacGregor Hunting and tell people it's in honour of John MacGregor who fought at the Alamo. A fib on top of a much larger fib.
So, wear what you want. Just be prepared for people to ask about your clan, family, lineage, etc...There are resources for what is most PROPER, but aside from wearing a regimental tartan to a regimental function, I don't think anyone can honestly tell you you're wrong. Also, buy your vest cut on the bias so it's a nice contrast to your kilt.
Mojave Jack said:I'm looking forward to your posts with pics of you in the suit, BK! ...in public, of course! That peak lapel really makes that second suit!
Baron Kurtz said:Aye, those would be the Duke of Windsor's suits. My size, but way outside by price range, i'm afraid. (The one on the right belonged originally to Edward VII, and was retailored to fit Edward VIII.) I believe the one on the right is the "Lord of the Isles" tartan. Another horrid imperialist holdover.
bk
Graeme said:On a slightly different note, im not sure if this is true or not, maybe someone here knows.
As for proper tartans, there are restrictions on what can be made by who.
My sisters ex boyfriends family owned a mill in yorkshire. Apparantly they were the only mill allowed to produce (proper) tartans outside of scotland.
Anyone know if that was likely to be true?
kiltie said:Alan Eardley -
Man, it's good to kick around a subject with someone who knows what they're talking about. It's why these sites are a blessing and a curse - just enough info is exchanged to start the conversation... Anyway, Just wanted to add that I was speaking in extremely broad strokes to anyone who gets their Scottish history from reading Walter Scott and watching Bravehart. You then took the thing to the opposite extreme with (well informed ) relatively confined examples. I think we're on the same clock, just opposite ends of the pendulum right now. I don't know how to use the PM feature , but anything you have to offer on the subject would be appreciated. I spent all morning looking for my books and I think we may need to start a whole new site.
If you haven't read The Scottish Highlanders and Their Regiments by Michael Bander, do so. It's a quick read and quite a swashbuckler.
dhermann1 said:What I find fascinating and tantalizing about this subject is the fact that plaids in general go back thousands of years. The ancient Romans almost defined barbarism as the wearing of trousers. The ancient Celts, the ancestors of the the Scots and the Irish, wore plaid wool trousers.
The Scots, being descended from the combination of Celtic, Pictish and Norse, obviously came up with their own variations on the theme. But given that the Celts had commercial contact with the Romans, and might have been able to trade for dyes or died yarns, they could have had some interesting colors and patterns in their plaids.
Can either of you gentlemen shed a little light on this aspect of the story?
Smithy said:There's a similar thing happening back home where a lot of Maori are getting very annoyed with non-Maoris going off and getting traditional Maori tattoos (Te moko). It's even more confounding when it's someone who isn't even from NZ.