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16th June 06, 11:55 PM
#1
Pleating to the stripe
I know what you mean, Hamish, about those hidden red stripes flashing out when the kilt swings out--I still remember a girl in high school had a kilt skirt that was made that way, and fascinating it was.
But just as a personal opinion, I notice that when a kilt is pleated to the stripe instead of the sett, the kilt looks completely different from the front to the back, as the pattern of the tartan is hidden in the pleats. My preference is that the tartan should be the same and recognizable from all sides.
Last edited by kiltimabar; 16th June 06 at 11:56 PM.
Reason: typo
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17th June 06, 03:34 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by kiltimabar
.............................................
But just as a personal opinion, I notice that when a kilt is pleated to the stripe instead of the sett, the kilt looks completely different from the front to the back, as the pattern of the tartan is hidden in the pleats. My preference is that the tartan should be the same and recognizable from all sides.
I know exactly where you are coming from with this and 99% of the time I would agree with you. However, some tartans just yell out to be pleated to the stripe. My "Bruce of Kinnaird AC" is, in my opinion a prime example:


(PS: Since my original 2004 post, I have had two other kilts pleated to the stripe : the "Bruce of Kinnaird" and the multi-toned grey tartan - "Grey Thistle Dubh". See my Photo Album.)
Last edited by Hamish; 17th June 06 at 03:38 AM.
Reason: Adding PS.
[B][I][U]No. of Kilts[/U][/I][/B][I]:[/I] 102.[I] [B]"[U][B]Title[/B]"[/U][/B][/I]: Lord Hamish Bicknell, Laird of Lochaber / [B][U][I]Life Member:[/I][/U][/B] The Scottish Tartans Authority / [B][U][I]Life Member:[/I][/U][/B] The Royal Scottish Country Dance Society / [U][I][B]Member:[/B][/I][/U] The Ardbeg Committee / [I][B][U]My NEW Photo Album[/U]: [/B][/I][COLOR=purple]Sadly, and with great regret, it seems my extensive and comprehensive album may now have been lost forever![/COLOR]/
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17th June 06, 04:22 AM
#3
Just a little bit of history to put things in perspective. Pleating to the sett is a relatively new thing in the world of kilt making. When Stuart Ruaidri Erskine wrote The Kilt & How to Wear It in 1901, he described pleating to the sett as a very new thing, and he didn't even know if it had a proper name, but he liked it!
Since then it has become the norm, but the norm for most of the nineteenth century was pleating to the stripe.
Kilts, keep in mind, were first tailored at the very end of the eighteenth century. The oldest surviving kilt is from 1792 and it is a Gordon Highlanders regimental kilt, containing less than 4 yards of cloth, box pleated, to the yellow line. All military kilts were pleated to the line (to stripe). Civilian kilts from this period were pleated to no pattern at all (see the main page at http://www.scottishtartans.org for a picture of a civilian kilt c. 1800 which is pleated to no pattern). Civilian kilts eventually adopted the military fashion of pleating to the line sometime around 1815-1820 so that by the mid-1820s the norm for a civilian kilt was about 4 yards of cloth, box pleated to the line.
Box pleating did not come out of India, I'm afraid, nor was it invented as an accedental way of pressing or pleating a knife pleated kilt. All the early tailored kilts were box pelated. The first regiment to adopt knife pleating (side pleating) was the Gordon Highlanders in 1854.
Y'all have a good weekend!
Matt
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17th June 06, 05:14 AM
#4
The pictures Hamish just posted inspired me to get at least one kilt pleated to the stripe
MacLaren muted, pleated to the stripe...the yellow stripe running vertically also is pretty stunning imho.

The sett
Last edited by Robin; 17th June 06 at 05:21 AM.
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17th June 06, 07:07 AM
#5
Lots of great history! Great Pics! Thanks guys.
This may just be me, but often when look at a a tartan pleated to stripe/line I almost miss the stripe that its pleated to. I see the strong, dominate stripes running horizontally and almost miss the center stripe running vertically. Just an observation.
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17th June 06, 07:41 AM
#6
 Originally Posted by Robin
The pictures Hamish just posted inspired me to get at least one kilt pleated to the stripe ...
MacLaren muted, pleated to the stripe...the yellow stripe running vertically also is pretty stunning imho.
I agree, handsome tartan, and it looks good pleated to the stripe. Thanks for the pictures.
Interesting thead.
Regards,
Scott Gilmore
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17th June 06, 09:09 AM
#7
Matt is, of course, spot on with his input in this thread. You just gotta love and respect the wealth of knowledge he and others like him dispense so freely for those of us here who aren't as well-educated (myself included) on the historical aspects of kilts and kilt-wearing.
 Originally Posted by Hamish
...some tartans just yell out to be pleated to the stripe.
I'm in full agreement with this but I'll even go as far as to say Ham's statement applies to most tartans. It's just my opinion that pleating to stripe looks better and gives a kilt even more 'character'.
Last edited by MacSimoin; 17th June 06 at 09:15 AM.
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17th June 06, 09:58 AM
#8
Serious agreement, once I saw how cool a stripe looked and the way the colors flash when it swings (I think it was Barb T.s Antarctica or some such ) I was hooked. That's how my X Marks will be done.
CT - yelling, screaming, striping.
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17th June 06, 12:24 PM
#9
One of the State Universities here, University of California, Riverside (UCR) had their own tartan developed and kilts made for their pipe band.
I believe it is pleated to the stripe, because when viewed from the front you see this across the apron
http://www.pipeband.ucr.edu/tartan.html

When viewed from behind, the kilt is a much more gold tone, except for this flash of rich, royal blue jumping out with every step.
Honestly, I think it is the most attractive kilt/tartan I have ever personally seen, and I do hope to get one myself, though I have no ties to the school at all.
EDIT: To add more pictures.
http://www.lindaclifford.com/UCRPipeBand.html
http://www.pipeband.ucr.edu/
Last edited by Yaish; 17th June 06 at 12:30 PM.
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17th June 06, 12:47 PM
#10
Being an ex-mil type, I much prefer pleated to the stripe. I doubt, of any tartan kilt I'll own, that I'll ever pleat to sett.
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