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Thread: what is this??

  1. #11
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    Re: what is this??

    Ditto this... MacKenzie

    Quote Originally Posted by Tony View Post
    MacKenzie Hunting Green

  2. #12
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    Re: what is this??

    Thank you for helping to ID the tartan (MacKenzie?). I though THAT would be the hard part. The color discrepancy COULD be due to the item's probable advanced age.

    Any idea what this thing is?? Is it a piper's full plaid?
    [FONT="Times New Roman"]"It's a bifercated world, unless kilts vote!."[/FONT]

  3. #13
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    Re: what is this??

    Piper's Plaids are just this length so I would think so. Any pipers in the family history?

  4. #14
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    Re: what is this??

    Quote Originally Posted by xman View Post
    Piper's Plaids are just this length so I would think so. Any pipers in the family history?
    No pipers, but there IS a great old picture of a bunch of my relatives in some very formal dress. I'll have to see if this item matches.
    [FONT="Times New Roman"]"It's a bifercated world, unless kilts vote!."[/FONT]

  5. #15
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    Re: what is this??

    You dont list where you are, but if it's a seaforth highlanders tartan, which it seems to be, I'd be looking at soldiers in your relatives (ross-shire, inverness?), if you're in canada they probably had an equivalent there, so you might want to look at relatives in that area too (vancouver?)
    Last edited by madmacs; 19th February 12 at 09:38 PM.

  6. #16
    M. A. C. Newsome is offline
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    Re: what is this??

    It is the MacKenzie tartan, aka Seaforth. (BTW, there is no such tartan called "MacKenzie Hunting Green." It's simply the MacKenzie tartan).

    I would agree that this was worn as a plaid of some sort. It is/was not uncommon for those to have a purled fringe at the ends, and the dimensions are about right.

  7. #17
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    Re: what is this??

    Note that it's not uncommon for the same tartan to appear with and without black edging to the light lines- this variance doesn't have any meaning, and is added to make the light lines stand out more.

    Yes that I the MacKenzie Seaforth tartan, of which is said in The Setts of the Scottish Tartans

    The regimental tartan of the Seaforth Highlanders, who were raised in 1778 by MacKenzie, Earl of Seaforth, has the same scheme as the Athol Murray, the difference being that the outer of the three red stripes of the latter are, in the MacKenzie, white. What tartan the MacKenzies may have worn prior ot 1778 we do not know; very possibly a red one.
    Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte

  8. #18
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    Re: what is this??

    Quote Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome View Post
    (BTW, there is no such tartan called "MacKenzie Hunting Green." It's simply the MacKenzie tartan).
    Colour me a bright shade of confused.....
    http://www.tartansauthority.com/tart...nzie-htg-green

    Daft Wullie, ye do hae the brains o’ a beetle, an’ I’ll fight any scunner who says different!

  9. #19
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    Re: what is this??

    Quote Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome View Post
    I would agree that this was worn as a plaid of some sort. It is/was not uncommon for those to have a purled fringe at the ends, and the dimensions are about right.
    I agree, it's a plaid. With the fringed end, it really can't be anything else. In modern terms, we think "piper's plaid", but if it's roughly 100 years old, it came from a time where plaids were not just relegated to pipers. So there needn't be a piper in the family for this to have been part of someone's Highland dress paraphernalia.

  10. #20
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    Re: what is this??

    Quote Originally Posted by Tony View Post
    Colour me a bright shade of confused.....
    http://www.tartansauthority.com/tart...nzie-htg-green
    Yeah, when you read the notes, it all makes sense... regardless of how ridiculous that sense is. People are going nutsO with the tartan, nowdays.

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