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30th March 25, 07:40 AM
#11
Custom kilts
 Originally Posted by RGM1
I am anticipating my Tewksbury kilt in the Fleming/Frisken/Flanders tartan any day now. I will wear my Murray of Atholl kilt to the tartan Day 2025 parade since my current plan is to be in the parade with the Murray contingent. It will be a tough call; the Fleming tartan is uncommon and quite striking. It was my first preference when I was ordering my first kilt but was too pricy until a remnant became available.
I understand your point of seeing different groups and plan to play it by ear whether I stick to one spot in the parade or find a vantage point.
I looked up your tartan options on the STA website, but I doubt I'll remember them well enough to sort out whether what you're wearing as you march by is your Murray or Barb Tewksbury's handiwork (except that in one case you'll blend in, and in the other, stand out, unless of course you're draped in plastic). One option THERE, of course would be just to repurpose one of the bags that shelter clothing you bring back from your local dry cleaner, and THAT, of course, will be influenced by the ambient temperature.
Parenthetically, I feel blessed to have been able to work with Professor Tewskbury for the construction of my most recent acquisition. Truly a remarkably generous person. I'm sure your Murray buddies will welcome you in their contingent no matter WHICH kilt you wear!
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30th March 25, 07:56 AM
#12
For the parade, I plan to wear my Murray of Atholl kilt. It will be a pleasant surprise if my Fleming kilt being built by Barbara Tewksbury is in hand before the weekend, but from correspondence that is unlikely. Watching the weather my plans to travel light are misguided so a change of clothes is indicated. Best guess, my Grand Canyon kilt from USA kilts will get an outing at Carnegie Hall.
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30th March 25, 08:04 AM
#13
Dunfermline
 Originally Posted by Hirsty
I appeared at the Carnegie Hall when I was at high school. It was the one in Dunfermline though.
Having flown in and out of Edinburgh a few times, it looks as though I've been quite close to there, and I just learned that the father of my Clan is buried there, so it will deserve a visit on MY next visit to Scotland, assuming that by then the Scots are kind enough allow the foolish Americans in!
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30th March 25, 05:39 PM
#14
 Originally Posted by jsrnephdoc
Having flown in and out of Edinburgh a few times, it looks as though I've been quite close to there, and I just learned that the father of my Clan is buried there, so it will deserve a visit on MY next visit to Scotland, assuming that by then the Scots are kind enough allow the foolish Americans in!
Dunfermline is super easy to get to from Edinburgh. You can hop on a train from Haymarket or Waverley with the added bonus of going across the Forth Rail Bridge (chuck a coin out for good luck if the windows open).
Dunfermline used to be quite a rough place when I was a wain. Rather stabby. It is much nicer now and is basically a suburb of Edinburgh.
The Abbey is stunning but make sure to have a wander through the Glen (Pittencrieff Park) and St Margaret's Cave.
Definitely get a steak bridie from Stephen's the Baker.
I met a lad at a brewery barbecue a while back and found out recently that he has started up a YouTube channel about Scottish history. Good lad and he makes great videos here is on on the Abbey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKMV4ZRHDK4
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30th March 25, 06:22 PM
#15
Visiting Edinburgh AND Dunfermline
 Originally Posted by Hirsty
Dunfermline is super easy to get to from Edinburgh. You can hop on a train from Haymarket or Waverley with the added bonus of going across the Forth Rail Bridge (chuck a coin out for good luck if the windows open).
Dunfermline used to be quite a rough place when I was a wain. Rather stabby. It is much nicer now and is basically a suburb of Edinburgh.
The Abbey is stunning but make sure to have a wander through the Glen (Pittencrieff Park) and St Margaret's Cave.
Definitely get a steak bridie from Stephen's the Baker.
I met a lad at a brewery barbecue a while back and found out recently that he has started up a YouTube channel about Scottish history. Good lad and he makes great videos here is on on the Abbey https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKMV4ZRHDK4
Thanks for all of that. I'll watch the video. We stayed at a hotel just a block from Waverly Station last time I was in Edinburgh.
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31st March 25, 09:41 AM
#16
 Originally Posted by jsrnephdoc
What tartan do they wear? Was it custom designed for the band?
Yes, it's a bespoke tartan designed for the band when they were called "Pipers' Trail Pipes & Drums".
https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/ta...ails?ref=11049
Personally I think they should have gone with the 50th Edinburgh Military Tattoo tartan, which would make for more colourful uniforms
https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/ta...tails?ref=4960
The CGI Tartan Register image certainly doesn't do this tartan justice, it's beautiful, take a look https://www.edintattoo.co.uk/news/we...-tattoo-tartan
The Pipers Trail tartan is dark blue with narrow white stripes, and the band's doublets are dark blue with narrow white piping.
It's always nice to have a contrast between the jackets and the kilts.
Last edited by OC Richard; 31st March 25 at 09:49 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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31st March 25, 10:36 AM
#17
Edinburgh tattoo tartans
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
I'll guess you already know this, but if you search for a tartan by name on the STA website, then click on its small placeholder image, you'll get a much larger image that yields a far more detailed impression of what it would look like "in the cloth." Here's the result of that for Peter MacDonald's 50th Anniversary tartan:
At the moment, I'm exploring a "Robertson (Struan)" variant that I find much more pleasing than the "stoplight red" most common "Robertson" red. While the pattern is quite different from the 50th Anniversary tattoo tartan, the color palette is similar, and I think MUCH more interesting than the usual Robertson Red:
My guess is that this pattern could be exploited for VERY handsome kilts pleated to the stripe. Unfortunately, however, it seems THIS Robertson variant is woven primarily (if not ONLY) by DC Dalgliesh, and they seem just to have exited the business of weaving/selling tartan!
Of course, with your trained graphic designer eye you might point out that this might require VERY brilliant red (NO WAY) or green (possible), or (more likely) blue Argyll jackets for pairing.
Any thoughts on that?
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31st March 25, 04:30 PM
#18
 Originally Posted by jsrnephdoc
I'm exploring a "Robertson (Struan)" variant that I find much more pleasing than the "stoplight red" most common "Robertson" red. While the pattern is quite different from the 50th Anniversary tattoo tartan, the color palette is similar, and I think MUCH more interesting than the usual Robertson Red:
That's nice! But I always want to see woven cloth if possible. CGI images never seem to do justice to the actual cloth.
I'm not sure which tartan you mean by "the common Robertson red".
The book The Setts of the Scottish Tartans gives four Robertson tartans. Three of the four have significant amounts of red.
One is said to be "in early collections" and is around half red and half blue & green. It has a white line.
Another is from Logan (1831) similar but without the white line.
Then there's the Allen Brothers one, like several of their tartans a simplified version of the one in current use in their time. It has a slightly higher proportion of red.
EDIT: I looked online and I'm seeing mostly the Logan (1831) version of Robertson. The older one, with the white line, is nicer I think, but the Struan one you posted is better yet.
Last edited by OC Richard; 31st March 25 at 04:33 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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31st March 25, 06:36 PM
#19
Robertson Clan gathering
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
That's nice! But I always want to see woven cloth if possible. CGI images never seem to do justice to the actual cloth.
(and)
I looked online and I'm seeing mostly the Logan (1831) version of Robertson. The older one, with the white line, is nicer I think, but the Struan one you posted is better yet.
That is indeed what most people think of when they're thinking of "the" Robertson tartan. Of course, the mills are successfully exploiting "ancient colors" vs. "modern colors" for both "hunting" and "dress" (red) versions.
Here's the clan chieftain, my Dad, my sister, and two other women (I think one is the chieftain's wife), at a clan gathering in Pitlochry probably in the late 1990s. It looks like my dad has acceptable taste in socks My sister's kilt skirt and sash are "muted," but the clan Chieftain and my Dad are in the most common version of the red tartan:

Sadly, NONE of the mills list the Robetson (Struan) tartan among their stock weaves, but Barb Tewksbury tells me it wouldn't be too difficult to get a custom weave done by H o E.
And I should mention that if one visits one of the well respected kilt RETAILERS (in the U.K. or the U.S. and just searches for "Robertson," up comes more than 40 choices, but that's same tartan from different mills, or single vs. double width weaves, or dark or muted or weathered color palettes, or different fabric weights.
Last edited by jsrnephdoc; 31st March 25 at 06:47 PM.
Reason: restore image
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31st March 25, 07:58 PM
#20
The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo Pipes & Drums is indeed in the USA right now! Performing in Washington DC and presumably then up to New York.
https://www.facebook.com/TheRoyalEdi...MilitaryTattoo
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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