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18th July 07, 08:41 PM
#11
Originally Posted by Woodsheal
I've read descriptions of wool or silk tape binding around the edges of plaids from that period. Some of my reenactor friends do this to theirs, and it looks good!
Brian, is there a reason for this, does it serve a purpose, or is it just for looks?
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18th July 07, 11:46 PM
#12
Originally Posted by Angus
Brian, is there a reason for this, does it serve a purpose, or is it just for looks?
Perhaps they were unable to get a selvedge or it became frayed and the ribbon was used as a patch...?
It might look pretty interesting to have a half inch edge around the bottom cut on the bias.
There are 10 kinds of people in the world...
Those that understand binary, and those that don't.
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19th July 07, 03:35 AM
#13
it always puzzles me that on very old depictions/portraits of people playing pipes they are very often playing them left handed, or a "mirror image" as is his kilt apron
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19th July 07, 04:11 AM
#14
Originally Posted by highlander_Daz
it always puzzles me that on very old depictions/portraits of people playing pipes they are very often playing them left handed, or a "mirror image" as is his kilt apron
The image is not reversed in this case (look at the printing on his banner)....
I think the binding on the plaid edge was both decorative, and to protect the edges from fraying....
Brian
"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." ~ Benjamin Franklin
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19th July 07, 04:29 AM
#15
Originally Posted by highlander_Daz
it always puzzles me that on very old depictions/portraits of people playing pipes they are very often playing them left handed, or a "mirror image" as is his kilt apron
I know that sometimes an image gets reversed during the editing process before it gets printed (or put on a web site). I know this to be the case because sometimes I have seen two versions of the same picture!
However, as Brian points out, we know that's not the case here, because the writing is correct. Maybe we just have a left handed piper!
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19th July 07, 04:48 AM
#16
Originally Posted by highlander_Daz
it always puzzles me that on very old depictions/portraits of people playing pipes they are very often playing them left handed, or a "mirror image" as is his kilt apron
Daz
William Cumming was a 'left handed' piper .
It was not uncommon in Highland piping tradition .
'Right handed' conformity is more British army instituted thing , that a natural way .
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20th July 07, 04:07 AM
#17
I know its not uncommon to see a left hander , but it seems on a lot of old depictions of pipers they are depicted as playing left handed, on very old engravings etc, I wonder where they buy thoses left handed chanters from? the Tartan paint shop maybe?
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20th July 07, 04:22 AM
#18
Originally Posted by highlander_Daz
it always puzzles me that on very old depictions/portraits of people playing pipes they are very often playing them left handed, or a "mirror image" as is his kilt apron
Many classically trained artists used mirrors to capture the outline of a subject accurately. There are a TON of left handed people in paintings during the ages of the ninja turtle artists.
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20th July 07, 09:09 AM
#19
i thought as much, I wonder if Matt Groening uses the same technique?
i was wondering if there was a connection between both the left hander and the bagpipes being associated with the devil, the connection beween the pipes and the Devil has always interested me, in Burns story "Tam O'Shanter" "Auld Nick"! appears playing the bagpipes, there is also a legend that playing the pipes in a thunderstorm will summon the Devil
sorry off topic
but those old pics are great
cowabunga dudes
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20th July 07, 09:21 AM
#20
On this pic hes playing left handed but his hands are right handed it looks like
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