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6th December 15, 10:26 AM
#1
Many thanks, Barb. I'll go back and review the book. I thought I would ask the question here, though, as there might be an extra bit of advice thrown in.
I assume, then, that I should charge something approaching my going rate scaled down a bit because I will use less tartan. Does this sound logical?
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6th December 15, 11:23 AM
#2
I actually don't scale the cost down at all. It's a similar number of pleats, and the hem is quite a lot of extra work unless you have a blind hemmer, and adding a hidden pleat is also extra work. I figure it all works out in the end.
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6th December 15, 12:11 PM
#3
Thanks, Barb. You have been very helpful. I can now give a good quote for the job.
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7th December 15, 09:06 PM
#4
Paging @argyle24, who I believe would also be able to help with suggestions...
Here's tae us - / Wha's like us - / Damn few - / And they're a' deid - /
Mair's the pity!
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8th December 15, 07:20 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Katia
Paging @ argyle24, who I believe would also be able to help with suggestions...
Thanks Kat - Barb's got this one covered. I think my only addition would be to advise the hem be generous - a 10 year old likely has quite a bit of growing upwards to do yet! While it's unlikely that this kilt will see them through their late teen to early adult years, with a good hem, it's not unreasonable for this to get them to the 14-16 age range - depending of course, on how they're built and when they begin to mature.
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8th December 15, 07:43 AM
#6
And remember that, if a child grows 8 inches, you're not going to have to let the kilt down 8" - not only is height growth distributed (obviously....) but kids in the 10-12 range tend to be leggy, so additional height is commonly less in the legs than elsewhere. So, a ginormous hem really isn't necessary for most kids.
I typically look at the tartan and pick a dark stripe somewhere between 2 and 4" from the selvedge (depending on how tall the child currently is) and fold the hem there. If you can avoid it, don't fold in the white - if the bottom of the kilt gets even a little bit grimy, you'll have an obvious line when you let down the kilt. You'll likely have to use a white area in the future when you let down the kilt, but at least you won't start out there.
Also, remember that the fell is stitched in proportion to the overall length of the kilt. So, if you let a kilt down a huge amount, the fell will be proportionately much too short. The kilt will be "flippy" rather than swingy, because the fell isn't long enough to control the pleat swing.
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8th December 15, 12:44 PM
#7
Many thanks for everyone's input. All very good to know.
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