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  1. #11
    Join Date
    1st February 12
    Location
    Northeast Ohio, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by cable scot View Post
    Also Donnie at Wyvern leather works made a belt for me to commerate my involvement in a Paralimpic nordic world cup and the buckle that the U.S. team gave me.
    I love that belt and buckle. What a great piece of kit!
    KEN CORMACK
    Clan Buchanan
    U.S. Coast Guard, Retired
    Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, USA

  2. #12
    Join Date
    5th July 11
    Location
    Inverlorne
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    2,570
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    My Clanranald tartan kilt was hand sewn by my brother xman for our other brother's wedding. This means the most to me of all my kit.

    My Clan Donald kilt and TOS remind me of my regimental service.

    My Prince Charlie outfit was passed on to me by a family friend who was very close to my grandmother.

    My sterling silver pocket watch will be an heirloom also.
    Natan Easbaig Mac Dhòmhnaill, FSA Scot
    Past High Commissioner, Clan Donald Canada
    “Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland, And we, in dreams, behold the Hebrides.” - The Canadian Boat Song.

  3. #13
    Join Date
    22nd August 10
    Location
    Orangeburg SC via Los Angeles CA
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    730
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    My go to kilt is in Firefighters Memorial from USA Kilts: As a Vollie FF on 9/11, I can easily imagine that had I been on shift in NY, I would have entered and started climbing stairs. My boss at the time was a Vollie EMS and he stated that he would have been climbing stair with me.

    My kilt pin was found in my mothers jewelry last year when we brought her home due to her Alzheimer's dementia. I consider it a present from her.

    Any USN CPO insignia that I wear, I wore while I was on active duty.
    I've found that most relationships work best when no one wears pants.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    14th January 08
    Location
    San Antonio, TX
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    I replaced the irish harp buttons on my Brian Boru (PC equivalent) jacket and vest with round antiqued pewter buttons adorned with a fleur de lis, and often wear a goldtone fleur de lis kilt pin as well. This is in part because I live in Louisville (named after King Louis of France--not sure which one) which uses the fleur de lis as an emblem, but also because my surname ancestry traces back to the Counts of Flanders, then considered part of France the greater, and they used the fleur de lis as part of their standard. A tip of the bonnet to the past and the present.

  5. #15
    Join Date
    10th October 08
    Location
    Louisville, Kentucky, USA (38° 13' 11"N x 85° 37' 32"W gets you close)
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    Quote Originally Posted by ForresterModern View Post
    This is in part because I live in Louisville (named after King Louis of France--not sure which one)
    Louis XVI - he supported the colonists in the Revolutionary War. The exploits of then Lt Col George Rogers Clark (later Brig Gen and founder of the Louisville settlement) on the western frontier in 1778 were used to encourage the alliance with France. In 1779, the settlers moved from Corn Island at the Falls of the Ohio to the southern bank, calling the new settlement Louisville in honor of Louis XVI's support. The city charter was officially recognised by Gov Thomas Jefferson in 1780.


    In answer to the OP's question, none of my kit has any particularly sentimental meaning to me - I bought all of it myself. (My family has no history of kilt-wearing. My paternal line has lost the connection to Europe, having been in Kentucky since 1790 or so, and Virginia and possibly Pennsylvania before that.)
    John

  6. #16
    Join Date
    5th November 08
    Location
    Marion, NC
    Posts
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    Here's my story.
    These hose are worked in my college colors:


    This belt buckle, made for me by a former X-marker, features my monogram:


    When I made my corduroy Argyll, I used these locking-heart buttons...


    ...as a nod the clan Lockhart, which was my late grandmother's maiden name. Here's the tartan, along with my favorite "accessory":
    --dbh

    When given a choice, most people will choose.

  7. #17
    Join Date
    1st December 06
    Location
    Conyers, Georgia
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    My buckles for day wear are either a USMC waistplate or a Square-and-Compass waistplate for obvious reasons.

    I also have a pocket watch that was my granfather's, an Illinois he carried over 50 years as a fireman and engineer. He bought it from a pawn shop when he returned from France in WW I. I carry it when wearing a waistcoat, kilted or no.

    Aside from those items, I just have stuff! On old, inexpensive Rob Roy which was my first sporran, kind of sentimental for that. And the first balmoral is a favorite. Old and terribly worn now.
    Jim Killman
    Writer, Philosopher, Teacher of English and Math, Soldier of Fortune, Bon Vivant, Heart Transplant Recipient, Knight of St. Andrew (among other knighthoods)
    Freedom is not free, but the US Marine Corps will pay most of your share.

  8. #18
    Join Date
    13th September 04
    Location
    California, USA
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    A coupler of years ago I spent 4-5 days sitting around my in-laws house, basically waiting for my mother-in-law to die. I really liked my mother in law.


    Well, I was very much wanted (by my wife and brother in law) to be in the house, but not so much in moms room, so I spent the time stitching up a kilt in the Gray Stewart tartan. The thread and needles were from moms sewing chest.

  9. #19
    Join Date
    27th October 09
    Location
    Kerrville, Texas
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    This kilt belt and sporran are meaningful to me because my wife made them for me. (That's her head partially blocking the photo, LOL.)




    One of the "blanket pins" I use as a kilt pin belonged to my late mother. Plus the clan badge I wear on my Balmoral, which she bought on one of her trips to Scotland.




    There are also various shirts and ties that I wear which belonged to my grandfather, as well as cufflinks and tie tacks. And last but not least, I have my great-grandfather's pocket watch (from the early 1920s) which needs repair.

    It always gives me great pleasure and pride to wear items that have family history. After all, isn't family history one of the biggest aspects of wearing the kilt?

  10. #20
    Join Date
    6th February 10
    Location
    U.S.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tobus View Post
    After all, isn't family history one of the biggest aspects of wearing the kilt?
    Indeed it is. Quite an important and paramount aspect, in my humble opinion.

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