A word of caution- asking us to pick between #1 and #2 is a bit like choosing between a praire jackrabbit that is sitting in front of you and the Easter Bunny. One is real and the other isn't. The fabric that you had woven for your kilt is in hand and can be color-matched to future orders. It is composed of "real" colors. All of the graphics on the STA website are "imaginary" in the sense that they are not keyed to a Pantone Number so they really represent the "idea of a color"- this is they way that thread counts work: R, B, G, K don't represent a particular shade of red, blue, green, or black- they represent any of those shades that one would choose to weave in. In addition, colors will look different on different computer monitors, so we're not necessarily even seeing the same colors as you...

You may like those colors that you see on the STA website (like seeing a particular housepaint color in a magazine photo), but unless you can find a physical thread color to match the specific hues that you want (i.e. "I'll take the Sherwin-Williams #124 Cornflower Blue, please"), I'm afraid you'll be disappointed every time you do a custom-weave because the real thread colors don't match the image in your mind.

Peruse the recent thread showing how Rocky R. designed Hamish Bicknell's custom personal tartan. Once of the photos in that thread showed the thread-hanks that Rocky used as color samples for their custom weaves. That will give you an idea of the subtle differences between the shades they weave in and the difficulty in getting the colors to match those imaginary ones in your mind. Or, get some samples of swatches from Dalgliesh-woven cloth. When you order from them say, "I want the red used in swatch labelled #1, the blue used in the swatch labelled #2, etc."

For what it's worth, I'm with Peter MacDonald and Matt on this one. I think the Wilson's of Bannockburn colors are the way to go!

Best of Luck,

David