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  1. #1
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    Question

    Verr' handsome, and cunning to the eye!
    Wanted to ask, though: how would you compare the "feel" of a tweed kilt (standing, moving, walking, etc.) to a 'regular' 14, 16 oz wool kilt?

  2. #2
    M. A. C. Newsome is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by arrg-isle View Post
    Verr' handsome, and cunning to the eye!
    Wanted to ask, though: how would you compare the "feel" of a tweed kilt (standing, moving, walking, etc.) to a 'regular' 14, 16 oz wool kilt?
    Well, just like worsted wool, you can find Harris tweed in various weights. My heavierst weight Harris Tweed kilt (made from the same cloth as the shooting jacket I am wearing here, actually), is like a horse blanket. This kilt is made from lighter stuff, and it's actually quite soft.

    Of course it's more rough and "itchy" than worsted, but to me that's part of the charm. It bothers some people, though. I love it! :-)

    It compares best to some of the heavy weight saxony I've worked with in some older kilts (seems you can't find heavy weight saxony tartan any more). The pleats will be softer, and the kilt all around has a softer feel.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by M. A. C. Newsome View Post
    Well, just like worsted wool, you can find Harris tweed in various weights.
    Harris tweed comes in not just an assortment of weights (although the real heavy stuff has become quite rare as demand has nearly vanished) but also textures due to the dyes, wool and weaving differences.

    seems you can't find heavy weight saxony tartan any more).
    I assume you mean wool spun tartans? The army has now-- for reasons of cost-- switched over to (a unified) worsted tartan.

    The pleats will be softer, and the kilt all around has a softer feel.
    Wool spun pleats are not really softer but I'd say less crisp. For mechanical wear, robustness and protection from the elements there is hardly a finer material than spun wool. It is these days more costly to make due to advances in automation, less smooth to the touch (what some might call scratchy) and patterns/colours are less well defined. Other than Hainsworth or Robert Noble I'm not quite sure who has even made wool spun kilt cloth since the 1950s.

  4. #4
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    Great look Matt!

    Cheers

    Jamie
    -See it there, a white plume
    Over the battle - A diamond in the ash
    Of the ultimate combustion-My panache

    Edmond Rostand

  5. #5
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    Looking good as usual Matt. Like the comment "so I made a quick 4 yard kilt". How many of us could say that?
    His Exalted Highness Duke Standard the Pertinacious of Chalmondley by St Peasoup
    Member Order of the Dandelion
    Per Electum - Non consanguinitam

  6. #6
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    I like it.
    Glen McGuire

    A Life Lived in Fear, Is a Life Half Lived.

  7. #7
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    Looks good, Matt. What's that waistcoat you're wearing?
    Jay
    Clan Rose - Constant and True
    "I cut a stout blackthorn to banish ghosts and goblins; In a brand new pair of brogues to ramble o'er the bogs and frighten all the dogs " - D. K. Gavan

  8. #8
    M. A. C. Newsome is offline
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    Quote Originally Posted by JRB View Post
    Looks good, Matt. What's that waistcoat you're wearing?
    The vest is a "Frontier" (CM60) from this website, in black. I replaced the buttons it came with.

  9. #9
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    Very nice. The kilt looks nice, and those shooting jackets are great too!

  10. #10
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    WOW! “So I made myself a quick 4 yard box pleated kilt from it” I wish I could say something like that.

    That shooting jacket is fantastic also; wish I had one of those for my upcoming Pheasant hunting trip.
    C.P.Rogerson
    Kwajalein Atoll, Republic Marshall Islands

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