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4th April 19, 03:25 AM
#1
Regarding using different color polish, I have some light tan shoes that I was unable to really fix the scuff marks on so I used darker brown polish on the toe. It looks pretty good to me.
I have some full brogue brown shoes that I often wear with a kilt but my sporran (chosen by my wife)is black. I am considering applying some black polish to the toes and heels, sort of a subtle spectator I would probably us the Safir cream polish as it is touted to have more pigment.
I do like your brown jump boots and had a pair once. I do not think that the flex part of the shoe looks good with a mirror shine. And preferred your first effort.
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4th April 19, 11:24 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by KMCMICHAEL
Regarding using different color polish, I have some light tan shoes that I was unable to really fix the scuff marks on so I used darker brown polish on the toe. It looks pretty good to me.
I have some full brogue brown shoes that I often wear with a kilt but my sporran (chosen by my wife)is black. I am considering applying some black polish to the toes and heels, sort of a subtle spectator I would probably us the Safir cream polish as it is touted to have more pigment.
I do like your brown jump boots and had a pair once. I do not think that the flex part of the shoe looks good with a mirror shine. And preferred your first effort.
There is nothing wrong with brown shoes----not so sure about light tan shoes with the kilt though --- and a black sporran, or vice versa, in a casual setting if thats what you wish.
" 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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5th April 19, 08:13 AM
#3
 Originally Posted by Jock Scot
There is nothing wrong with brown shoes----not so sure about light tan shoes with the kilt though  --- and a black sporran, or vice versa, in a casual setting if thats what you wish.
I agree and consider yours an expert opinion that warrants deference. I still have an aversion to black leather due to it being a required uniform item for many years. But, in a formal situation I would definatly wear black leather.
With brown shoes..forgive the hat.
89CAAA19-11C8-45E6-B002-B58286D49384.jpg
I do like tan leather shoes and wear them with a suit other than funerals.
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7th April 19, 07:21 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by KMCMICHAEL
I agree and consider yours an expert opinion that warrants deference. I still have an aversion to black leather due to it being a required uniform item for many years. But, in a formal situation I would definatly wear black leather.
With brown shoes..forgive the hat.
89CAAA19-11C8-45E6-B002-B58286D49384.jpg
I do like tan leather shoes and wear them with a suit other than funerals.
Steady on! All this praise might go to my head! But thank you for the compliment. 
I have had the advantage of spending an awful lot of years with countless knowledgeable and not so knowledgeable, kilt wearers in traditional and not so traditional settings and all I try to do is to pass on a wee bit of my experience based on my observations and conversations with my peers. It is not a matter of just rigidly sticking with right or wrong, or being modern, or traditional, or even historical, for me its a matter of wearing the kilt to best effect to fit the occasion. Sometimes my observations are well received here and sometimes not, hey ho! Such is life!
Last edited by Jock Scot; 7th April 19 at 07:32 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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7th April 19, 04:07 PM
#5
I never mastered the art of getting a decent polish on my boots in school cadet days. Since whatever I achieved was never good enough, in the end, I stopped bothering and just sported a decent mud coating every week. That of course was equally unpopular but saved a lot of time. Eventually, it was decided that I'd be better doing something else. Nowadays, my efforts aren't much better, though I do manage to get the mud off and some semblance of a shine on my brogues and my grandson's school shoes.
Last edited by tpa; 7th April 19 at 04:11 PM.
If you are going to do it, do it in a kilt!
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