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27th September 11, 06:35 PM
#31
Here's your Wisconsin state tartan:
I think it would look really pretty as a pencil skirt with maybe three or four wide pleats across the back of it.
--dbh
When given a choice, most people will choose.
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27th September 11, 09:13 PM
#32
Re: floor length womens kilts
Originally Posted by MeghanWalker
hey thats kinda nice... now I kinda want one. Shoot.
Im already broke. This is the last thing that I need to be looking at.
I well know the feeling. I was born in Washington State and Burnetts & Struth just happened to have that tartan in stock. I should have their casual (+ two yards) kilt in a couple of weeks or so. Don't worry about being broke. I'm finding kilt acquisition can make you even more broke than before.
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27th September 11, 10:59 PM
#33
Re: floor length womens kilts
This is a long kilt I like.
Double Box Pleated.
PM me for details.
Best,
Robert
Robert Amyot-MacKinnon
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27th September 11, 11:58 PM
#34
Re: floor length womens kilts
Originally Posted by Pleater
I don't mention it too often here - but women and girls do wear kilts, and 55 years ago when I was at Junior school a kilt was considered a good sort of skirt to wear at school in the colder months.
Women tended to wear a 27 inch kilt - that is one half of the 54 inch width wool fabric, as was woven on the standard wide looms - in fact 27 inches was a fairly standard length for most skirts.
You might find that for an ankle length garment a good kilt tartan would be too heavy - all garments have grown thinner and lighter in the last 100 years.
A kilt, really should be short - it is a skirt - the word is related to shirt, sarke, curt and cutty - just how skirt came to refer to a woman's garment which for most times and cultures would be ankle length, is not at all clear.
If you go for a long pleated skirt rather than the archetypal kilt you would have greater scope for design, bias cutting or pleating onto a yoke for instance. Lighter fabrics would also allow the use of fashion materials in plaid patterns rather than named tartans. There are also the unrestricted or universal tartans which can be found fairly easily - though sometimes in tiny setts a couple of inches across.
Be warned, though - it is difficult to make just one...
Anne the Pleater :ootd:
I'm still fascinated by David Livingstone's use of the term in several of his writings on South Africa. He does use the term kilt to describe women's knee-length, leather skirts. Makes me wonder when "kilt" began to be used as a generic term, like "Egyptian kilt" etc.. but it is certainly right there in Livingstone's writings.
Good luck to the OP with your search for the skirt you envision, and hope all goes well.
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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28th September 11, 12:36 AM
#35
Re: floor length womens kilts
Hello Robert,
That skirt IS a stunner! I especially like it with boots. I've admired Lady Chrystal's work for a long time. Both you and she have wonderful taste!
Cheers, Jocelyn
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28th September 11, 02:33 AM
#36
Re: floor length womens kilts
This is the Robert Burns poem/song Leezie Lindsay - look at the penultimate verse. The term is not unusual in folk songs where women take a belt and raise, gather in and fold their long garments when travelling.
Anne the Pleater :ootd:
Chorus:
Will ye gang tae the highlands, Leezie Lindsay,
Will ye gang tae the highlands wi' me
Will ye gang tae the highlands, Leezie Lindsay
My bride and my darling tae be.
Tae gang tae the heilands wi' you sir,
I dinna ken how that may be
For I ken not the road that I'm going
nor ken I the lad I'm going wi'
Oh Leezie lass, you muan ken little
if you say that ye dinna ken me
For my name is Lord Ronald MacDonald,
a cheiftain of high degree
Oh if you are the laird of MacDonald,
I great yin I ken you muan be
But how can a cheiftain sae mighty
think o' a poor lassie like me
Tae gang tae the heilands wi' you sir,
would bring the saut tear tae my e'e
At leaving the green glens and woodlands
and streams o' my ain country
Oh, I'll show you the red deer a-roamin',
on mountains where waves the tall pine
And as far as the bound of the red deer,
ilk moorland and mountain is mine
A thousand claymores I can muster,
ilk blade and its bearer the same
And when round their cheiftain they rally,
the gallant MacDonald's my name.
She has gotten a gown of green satin,
she has kilted it up tae the knee
And she's off wi' Lord Ronald MacDonald,
his bride and his darling to be.
There's dancing and joy in the heilands,
there's piping and gladness and glee.
For MacDonald has brought home Leezie Lindsay,
his bride and his darlin' to be.
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28th September 11, 02:55 AM
#37
Re: floor length womens kilts
I can't help it, I am a red blooded male after all, I admit to all that a tartan mini skirt worn by the right shaped female takes some beating. However the long tartan skirt runs a very close second! Regardless of age and shape of the lady it is very elegant and with the skills that you ladies have, can be "dressed" up or down for the occasion.
From a man's point of view, I recall well, one particular long tartan skirt that a very comely young lady wore to a smart drinks do, who managed to engineer a slit in the side of her long skirt to reveal ,every now and then, a very shapely leg-------rather a lot of it------not that I was really looking------but------well-------one could not fail to notice!
I my view, a long tartan skirt is almost a "must have" in any lady's wardrobe.
Last edited by Jock Scot; 28th September 11 at 03:08 AM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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28th September 11, 08:13 AM
#38
Re: floor length womens kilts
Originally Posted by Jock Scot
I can't help it, I am a red blooded male after all, I admit to all that a tartan mini skirt worn by the right shaped female takes some beating. However the long tartan skirt runs a very close second! Regardless of age and shape of the lady it is very elegant and with the skills that you ladies have, can be "dressed" up or down for the occasion.
From a man's point of view, I recall well, one particular long tartan skirt that a very comely young lady wore to a smart drinks do, who managed to engineer a slit in the side of her long skirt to reveal ,every now and then, a very shapely leg-------rather a lot of it------not that I was really looking------but------well-------one could not fail to notice!
I my view, a long tartan skirt is almost a "must have" in any lady's wardrobe.
Aye, Jock! All of the above!
Rev'd Father Bill White: Mostly retired Parish Priest & former Elementary Headmaster. Lover of God, dogs, most people, joy, tradition, humour & clarity. Legion Padre, theologian, teacher, philosopher, linguist, encourager of hearts & souls & a firm believer in dignity, decency, & duty. A proud Canadian Sinclair.
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28th September 11, 08:39 AM
#39
Re: floor length womens kilts
Ha! You men are all dogs!
Fall is in the air and soon the Billie kilts will be put away until next summer.
I like the kilt Chrystal is wearing...matches the dogs hair too. I need one in wolfhound and black.
Humor, is chaos; remembered in tranquillity- James Thurber
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28th September 11, 09:22 AM
#40
Re: floor length womens kilts
Originally Posted by Tartan Tess
*Snip*I like the kilt Chrystal is wearing...matches the dogs hair too. I need one in wolfhound and black.
*brushes dog hair off of black sweater* What tartan goes best with Jack Russell Terrier?
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