One common misconception is that weavers keep fabric on hand.
In truth only the largest weavers like Lochcarron can afford to have fabric just sitting around waiting for someone to order it. These are usually called 'stock tartans'.
But there are a lot of Tartans that exist only as images on a computer. I know one person who has designed well over 100 Tartans. None of them have ever been registered or woven.
And just because a Tartan is registered with either the Scottish Tartans Authority or The Scottish Register of Tartan does not guarantee that any has actually been woven. It used to be that to register a design you had to submit a woven swatch. That is not so today. You can submit a swatch but all it means is that your swatch will be place in the Archives. You don't even have to register the design if you don't want to.
And it is a very common misunderstanding that just because someone lists something on a website that there is some sitting on a shelf. For example - If you own a weaving loom you could show a sample of every registered Tartan on your site. It does not mean that you have bolts of all 12,000+ registered Tartans sitting on the shelf.
I guess it would make it more clear if those sites said something like. "We are custom weavers and can weave any Tartan. Here are some examples." but they don't.
Some weaving companies are actually very small operations. One I know of personally and have visited is located in a building 60 ft. X 60 ft. In that building are seven looms which take up the vast majority of the floor space other than the offices.
There is only enough shelving for some yarn and the fabric which has already been paid for, woven, and is waiting to go to the post office. This company does not even store their own yarns. They simply pick up what they need for the next order by walking down the street and buying it from the big weaving company.
Steve Ashton www.freedomkilts.com Skype (webcam enabled) thewizardofbc
I wear the kilt because: Swish + Swagger = Swoon.
Second that!!! My experience matches Steve's. If someone orders a custom weave of a tartan, it isn't worth it to the mill to weave a few extra yards on the off chance that someone might want to order that particular tartan among the literally thousands of tartans and their variants that are not commercially woven as stock tartans.
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