View Poll Results: Would you wear a "Full Length" Kilt?
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8th November 07, 11:03 PM
#61
That much leather HAS to be EXPENSIVE....and I'm OLDE....
but hey....it is LEATHER....and, I've been known to wear Macabi "river skirts" (boy did the Havasupai choke on that one a couple years ago)
But its WARM in the winter...
wonder how much it is with the beer gut cut....
Ron
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
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8th November 07, 11:11 PM
#62
 Originally Posted by sputnik
i would have done it in my "f-you" punk rock days. today. . . not so much.
Im with you on that one. I would have just done this to tick people off back in the day, not necessarily because I like it. I might try it just for grins but I dont think that it is personally my thing. And to those who said this is not a kilt, I agree. Comparing this full length thing so a kilt is like calling trousers and shorts the same thing.
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9th November 07, 09:10 AM
#63
Hmm. No to the long kilt, no to the sweater, no to the shirt, no to the glasses, and no to the haircut (but probably only because I can't grow my own anymore). But what nice boots he's wearing.
In my experience, it seems even difficult for a woman to wear a long skirt well. Evening dresses, fine, but a long skirt is probablematic for some reason.
And just for the record, for me, no to the evening dress.
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9th November 07, 09:55 AM
#64
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9th November 07, 11:53 AM
#65
In my hippy days I used to wear ankle length skirts, fairly wide at the hem but tapered to the waist - that way they can be cut from a fairly small piece of material by laying the pattern pieces / \ then \ /. I have ridden a BSA 650cc motorbike with sidecar when wearing one
The problem with making a long kilt is the double layer and discontinuity of the aprons - with a long skirt you can simply take hold and lift at one point and the entire hem will lift up. With a kilt style you need to manage two layers and under apron pleats - though perhaps it would be possible to make a sort of picking up strap attached to the back of the apron and threaded through eyelets to the innermost layer. Even then I can't see it being worn by anyone who did anything active - pacing along carpeted corridors or tiled cloisters would probably be OK, stepping out of taxis into a bar might get a bit exciting, but anything more vigorous and I'd say lose the kilt...
I have Thai trousers - the sort which wrap around but have open sides, and they have to be pulled up to ascend steps. Hakama, I find, have to be shorter than ankle length if not to be stepped on.
I have thought of making a long skirt with a kilt style panel of pleats at the back and three panels for the front, with single pleats at the edges of the centre front panel. I would use material too light for a kilt, 45 inches wide and perhaps 5 yards long. There are border prints which would do very well for the ladies - but I really don't see the long kilt as a garment for men.
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9th November 07, 02:24 PM
#66
would look good on a women maybe, a dominatrix? or heavy metal lass?
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9th November 07, 03:03 PM
#67
It is what it is. It's just not a kilt.
William Grant
Stand Fast Craigellachie!
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9th November 07, 03:05 PM
#68
It's not a kilt... and it's laughably horrid! Sorry to be non-PC...!
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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9th November 07, 05:54 PM
#69
 Originally Posted by Woodsheal
It's not a kilt... and it's laughably horrid! Sorry to be non-PC...!
I would say that it most definitely is a kilt (pleated garment with overlapping apron made by the designer as item of men's apparel) its just an unfashionably long one.
Not something I'd be interested in wearing, but live and let live.
Best regards,
Jake
[B]Less talk, more monkey![/B]
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9th November 07, 06:20 PM
#70
 Originally Posted by Monkey@Arms
I would say that it most definitely is a kilt (pleated garment with overlapping apron made by the designer as item of men's apparel) its just an unfashionably long one.
Not something I'd be interested in wearing, but live and let live.
Best regards,
Jake
Then I shall say that this kilt is evolving too far and too fast for me.
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