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9th August 24, 11:40 PM
#1
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Exactly.
It's what could be called "the Starbucks effect" especially so as I sit here sipping a Starbucks drink which I could have bought anywhere in the world.
But when I was in Seattle I was determined to get coffee anywhere other than a Starbucks (there are little one-off coffee shops on every street).
Here in Scotland I suppose I would have to go to the Highlands, Inverness perhaps, to find the sort of shop I have in mind.
Inverness is home to Duncan Chisholm's wonderful shop - that is easy to find as it is right opposite the castle. And Ben Wyvis Kilts, too, but a few of the old favourites have closed down since Covid.
And the town has plenty on offer if you want to indulge in tartan-and-shortbread tat..!
Market forces, economies of scale, and all that sort of thing has all but killed off the provincial boutique kilt outfitters in recent years, and most of what's available now seems very generic. Sporrans mostly seem to come from you know who, and the range of tweeds available are from the usual suspects.
Aberdeen has a good offering of small outfitters, and is also home to the McCalls chain - their main shop is only a few minutes' walk from the railway station, and is like a department store over three floors. It's worth looking at simply for the fun of it, and their tailoring department and bespoke sporran service is what it must have been like 'back in the day'.
Piob Mhor in Blairgowrie has changed little over the years, and still has its kilt-making done on-site, along with bespoke tailoring for jackets. Excellent quality and finish, from what I have seen, and using tweeds from weavers favoured by Savile Row tailors.
Have fun..!
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11th August 24, 02:54 PM
#2
I always had great dealings with Houstons in Paisley. You could have a look at their website and if anything appeals you could get there quite easily by train or bus
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12th August 24, 12:19 AM
#3
If you have time and are in the area then have a look at:
Shilling & Fitz, Perth - call ahead
Stewart Christe, Edinburgh
Campbells of Beauly
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12th August 24, 09:19 PM
#4
Thanks!
I did spend yesterday wandering around Edinburgh and visiting the kilt shops I had found online, the "usual suspects" as you say.
I hadn't seen Peter's post about Stewart Christie, though it's a familiar name I somehow missed it when looking at shops online.
The most interesting place was Geoffrey Tailor, no longer with a ground-level shop but stairs leading to an upstairs room with a couple pleasant people busy working on online orders and such.
There were dozens of lovely tweed jackets, many one-offs waiting for pickup and a rack of odd one-offs for low prices, the last remaining jackets in tweeds they used to stock. Of course none of those were in my size.
I do have a Geoffrey jacket I bought directly from them. A couple years ago they had listed some ex-hire charcoal Crails on Ebay one of which was in my size.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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12th August 24, 09:21 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by John_Carrick
I always had great dealings with Houstons in Paisley. You could have a look at their website and if anything appeals you could get there quite easily by train or bus
Yes I was going to try to get out there if I had time.
With the band I only have two "off days" yesterday spent in Edinburgh and today will be at Vindolanda.
But hopefully rehearsal will end early enough Wednesday or Thursday for me to get out to Paisley before Houstons closes.
Last edited by OC Richard; 12th August 24 at 09:23 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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19th August 24, 09:17 AM
#6
The end of the visit-kilt-shops tale was Thursday when myself and a couple band-mates took the train to Kilmarnock to visit the McCallum bagpipe factory.
(And it's not a workshop, it's a proper factory, with rows of CNC machines and a couple robots helping the numerous craftsmen and technicians turn out, it's said, around 50 sets of pipes a week, more than some one-man pipe makers do in a year.)
We were given a fascinating and thorough tour of the factory, and ended up in the McCallum showroom which incorporates Ayrshire Kilt Shop.
There were racks of the same House of Edgar and Gaelic Themes kilt jackets with the same 400-pound prices.
But my eye was drawn to a small rack of odd jackets, and in examining these I found an Argyll in my size made in a lovely heavy dark grey tweed with loads of texture and character, so different from the off-the-peg "Arrochar" charcoal tweeds I'd seen in all the other shops.
It fit perfectly, and when I asked the price I was amazed to hear "70 pounds". I bought it immediately, and wore it all day at the Worlds on Saturday.
The only proper labels were ones stating "Made in Britain" and "48R".
Oddly, the care instructions label was hand-written on a sewn-in plain white satin tag.
And there was a sewn-in paper tag stating "McCallum J. McGregor" which suggests that a Mr McGregor never picked up his lovely jacket.
Last edited by OC Richard; 19th August 24 at 03:17 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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14th November 24, 09:11 PM
#7
Here's the heavy tweed Argyll I purchased at the McCallum Bagpipes factory in Kilmarnock, with a waistcoat I already had.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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15th November 24, 08:42 AM
#8
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Here's the heavy tweed Argyll I purchased at the McCallum Bagpipes factory in Kilmarnock, with a waistcoat I already had.

You could not convince me these weren't made as a set.
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16th November 24, 04:17 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by JPS
You could not convince me these weren't made as a set.
In person the tweeds are ever so slightly different, which didn't show up in the photo.
The buttons were another matter!
The waistcoat buttons were the same kind of imitation horn buttons, but oddly dull.
When faced with clothing problems I either sew my way out, or paint my way out.
Paint it was! I took off the waistcoat buttons and did a two-step paint job, first a rich deep brown then drybrush over with a lighter brown, reverse engineering how the jacket's buttons are painted. (Yes I think they're painted too.)
Top left: comparison of the jacket's buttons and a couple of the removed waistcoat buttons.
Top right: five of the waistcoat buttons have received their initial coat of shinier dark brown paint.
Bottom left: time to drybrush the lighter brown on the raised portions.

A closeup. You can see here that the waistcoat tweed has a bit less texture, and the colour is very slightly different.
I think the buttons came out nicely, an almost perfect match to the jacket's buttons.
Last edited by OC Richard; 16th November 24 at 04:49 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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