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31st July 16, 05:12 PM
#11
I wear my socks up or down based on if they make me look like an 80 year-old escapee from a retirement community or the virile young 60 year-old that I really am. 
Wear them how you feel comfortable and you will always look your best.
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The Following 2 Users say 'Aye' to sbroomheadsr For This Useful Post:
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1st August 16, 01:42 PM
#12
What that guy right above me in the thread wrote.
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to Alan H For This Useful Post:
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25th August 16, 06:52 PM
#13
My utility kilts are never worn in anything other than casual situations so if the weather is warm enough, I'll wear minimalist sandals from Bedrock in Seattle. If the weather is cool enough, I'll wear Dr Martens 14-eye boots or similar combat-style boots.
Best,
Jonathan
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26th August 16, 06:24 AM
#14
I'm a kiltwearing oldtimer/traditionalist who had been kilted for decades before Utilikilts were invented.
I well remember their novelty the first time we saw them, at a Utilikilt booth at one of our Games.
It seemed to me that from the start Utilikilts were a new Fashion Culture distinct from Highland Dress. This Fashion Culture usually included high Doc Marten boots, scrunched-down socks, and black t-shirts. Often seen also was long hair, piercings, and tattoos.
The whole "look" struck me as looking all of a piece, everything fitting the style.

This being the case, what has always looked odd to me is the mixing of Utilikilts with elements of Highland dress: kilt hose, sporrans, ghillies, Scottish bonnets, and so forth.
Highland Dress, likewise, is a unique Fashion Culture. I don't see any overlap or connexion between the two styles whatsoever.

Of course anyone can dress any way they please and I couldn't care less. With my background I do notice things though.
Last edited by OC Richard; 26th August 16 at 06:32 AM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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The Following 2 Users say 'Aye' to OC Richard For This Useful Post:
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26th August 16, 11:52 AM
#15
I don't have a U-kilt, but I have let my sock tops drop down toward the hiking boots while wearing the PV Grey Granite. For where I was and doing at the time, it didn't seem odd or out of place at all.
For what its worth (again, not owning a U-kilt), a dress-style sock/hose under the U-Kilt looks a bit odd to me. As Richard mentioned, there is something about everything fitting the style that provides visual appeal. The U-kilt seems to deserve a pair of heavy work socks rather than kilt-hose to pull the style together. Not that some styles of kilt hose aren't 'robust and workman' looking.
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to Taskr For This Useful Post:
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27th August 16, 04:56 AM
#16
I wore a utilikilt for a while a few years back, I was rather fond of my jump boots and scrunched white socks.
I feel it's the best look in my opinion
"Everything is within walking distance if you've got the time"
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to GrainReaper For This Useful Post:
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31st January 17, 08:57 PM
#17
My first "kilt" was a utilikilt and i have worn it boots scrunched socks an tee shirt- but i also wore it to my wifes christmas party. I wore an oatmeal sweater, utilikilt, belt, sporran, oatmeal hose, and black flashes.
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1st February 17, 07:22 AM
#18
Over the knee/mid thigh ONLY.
image.jpeg
"We are all connected...to each other, biologically; to the earth, chemically; to the universe, atomically...and that makes me smile." - Neil deGrasse Tyson
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4th April 17, 12:18 PM
#19
Boot length socks with combat boots
Generally I wear combat boots with my modern kilts, boot length socks.
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5th April 17, 05:53 AM
#20
I've worn solid-patterned hose scrunched down while wearing boots, my tartan kilt, and a casual, modern shirt.
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