The advice so far has been very helpful.

To be clear, I am not talking about a specific wedding, but rather a scenario that is bound to come up in the future. I was trying to see if I had already purchased enough jackets for most situations or if yet another was necessary. Trying to pinch a penny but don't want to look uncouth if there is a fellow Scot in the room with kilt know how.

I'm sure the tweed would pass muster to the non-kilties in the rooms to which I'm typically invited, but I'm really aiming to see if this is a 'done' thing. Typically, here, only the wedding party wears black tie (they usually do so even in the day time), so I wouldn't envision my Charlie ever being appropriate for such an occasion.

I suppose in the end, it would be better to have the dark argyll mid-range option. Like I said, if I wasn't wearing a kilt, I would wear a business suit to such an occasion whether or not there were some folks in khakis and an open collared shirt. Everyone has relatives they have to invite to such things and not all of them have the means, opportunity, familiarity to own the appropriate wardrobe. I don't typically follow the lowest common denominator in such cases.

In any case, it seems the tweed will get me by until I buy more appropriate evening attire. Although the point is well taken that if the event starts in the day, the tweed is good to go.

Quote Originally Posted by madmacs View Post
I'm confused here, are you talking about a specific wedding here? One which is "semi-formal" ? In which case your tweed argyll should be suitable, or are you talking in general terms of weddings? In which case the tweed will be suitable for some and the PC for others...

Or maybe I'm missing something...

In my experience here in the midwest you could turn up to most weddings I've been to in jeans and a t-shirt and not be too out of place... Of course you could also ask the bride/groom which they would prefer too.