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11th November 09, 08:56 AM
#11
My piping instructor is my cousin, who happens to be a girl. Not uncommon at all.
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11th November 09, 10:53 AM
#12
Ya gotta love a woman with a knife in her sock!!!
By Choice, not by Birth
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11th November 09, 12:09 PM
#13
My piping instructor, a female, wears a kilt - fitted for her - as a soloist. She wears a lace jabot and lace cuffs instead of a tie, and usually an Argyle style jacket.
When playing with the band, she's in band uniform: kilt, sporran, waistcoat, dress shirt, tie, etc. No lace to be seen.
So, in answer to the OP, no, it's not unusual for a female piper to wear a kilt. Sometimes a band will order kilts cut specifically for their female members (a little wider in the hips or a little shorter in the fell so that the pleats fall straight).
John
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11th November 09, 12:16 PM
#14
It seems odd to my eyes- the clothes don't look right on the wearer. There is a pipe band in Denver that leaves the uniform open for it's women- they dress in much more feminine attire, for the most part, and I personally like it. I can't remember which band it is, though...
"Two things are infinite- the universe, and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." Albert Einstein.
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11th November 09, 05:18 PM
#15
The "man in the middle" is Evan MacRae.
He was Pipe Major of the Cameron Highlanders for many years.
This photo was taken shortly after his retirement from the Army. He was head instructor at the piping school at Coeur d'Alene. That jacket isn't any sort of military style, just an interesting civilian jacket.
PM Evan MacRae's image has been imortalised on countless postcards, tea towels, rugs, etc etc due to a photo taken of him in Full Dress back in the 1950's which has been endlessly reproduced. I can go on Ebay any hour of any day and find dozens of items with that MacRae photo on them.
The instructors pictured are Sue Arbuthnot, Dan Deisner, PM Evan MacRae, Judy Morrison, Rene Cusson, and Ian MacCrimmon. (I apologise for any misspellings in these names- 1980 was a long time ago!)
Colin Gemmel was also teaching that year but for some reason he didn't pose for that photo.
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11th November 09, 05:25 PM
#16
Full disclosure w/r/t my personal background: I spent years in marching bands, so that might affect my response. My take on it = soloists and indoor players, do as you prefer, including women pipers wearing kilts and neckties. For a band that's 'in the field' rather than in a concert hall, it seems very appropriate to me to wear uniforms that are uniform. It looks good; I like it.
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12th November 09, 02:50 AM
#17
Last edited by OC Richard; 12th November 09 at 03:18 AM.
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12th November 09, 05:41 AM
#18
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Thanks OC. I knew I only had to ask about the cuffs and a reply would be forthcoming. I am really taken with his jacket, it is certainly the only double-breasted kilt jacket that I have seen. I am trying to remodel a tweed jacket to use as a kilt jacket. If it works then maybe a double-breasted version could be on the cards.
Thanks again.
regards
Chas
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12th November 09, 06:01 AM
#19
Certainly it's a very interesting jacket and now that you mention it, yes, it's the only double-breasted Highland jacket I can recall.
Note the interesting twisted silver/black shoulder cords.
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12th November 09, 06:42 AM
#20
Girl pipers are cool.
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