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31st December 05, 06:55 AM
#21
too much bother to put on a kilt ? !!!
One of the pleasures of kilt wearing is the ease of dressing, especially in winter, when I seem to need many layers of clothes to keep warm. Getting undershirts, overshirts etc, properly tucked into trousers is a bind (not to mention the longjohns underneath); buckling the kilt round the whole lot in one go is so quick and easy*. Most of my kilts are without straps and buckles on the sides (or if they are still there, I don't bother to use them), since a good leather belt is quite sufficient, imho.
Just recently, I had a week in trousers
It seemed to take all day getting dressed after visiting the loo !
I wore trousers to avoid any possible embarassment to a friend I had not seen in 30 years, living in a conservative backwater in Morocco.
I'll probably tell you about it shortly.
By the way, I'm still the same person you may have read of before, living in Grenoble, France. It's easier to find a new name than to remeber a password!
Martin
* no, not round the longjohns; din't neeed them wioth a woolen kilt!
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31st December 05, 12:52 PM
#22
Come to think of it, I do believe I like the ritual involved in getting all dressed up. It's not just that it doesn't bother me, it's actually kind of fun. I always get dressed in the same order and it's very reassuring.
Of course, I also love all the ritual involved in pipe smoking.
All those little rituals slow things down and force you to think about the day and what you are doing.
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31st December 05, 01:43 PM
#23
![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by furrycelt
I can't afford to by a Bear Kilt and a UtiliKilt at the same time. Both are quite different. I can't decide which I want first.
-ian
You should look at a Casual from USA. Less expensive than both of these and very good quality. If only they came in MacIntosh or Leatherneck; hint hint, in case Rocky reads this.
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31st December 05, 02:09 PM
#24
I think a man should wear what he wants to wear, when he wants to wear it.
It's about having choices, and not trading one form of tyranny for another.
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31st December 05, 02:40 PM
#25
I sometimes think that it's easier to throw on a pair of jeans, but not usually. I just have 2 UKs and a PK, which is what I wear when I dress up kilted usually. The hardest thing is putting on my kilt hose, because in the winter I wear sock liners under the hose, which makes them take longer to put on. But when it's not bitterly cold out I either wear just the kilt hose (which are always pulled up), or short socks.
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31st December 05, 05:17 PM
#26
Kilt Decisions
Its gotten pretty much manual, after 2 years of dressing. Do I feel like dressing up?
Kilt hose, flashes, nice shirt, maybe tie.
Do I feel like being Casual?
Socks, Leg Warmers (if its cold), and a shirt that doesn't go poorly.
Once you wear the kilt regular, you know what goes with what. The Black Watch kilt (which I wear most the time during Winter) is practically Black, so will look good with anything.
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31st December 05, 06:37 PM
#27
Elijah, what kind of leg warmers do you wear? Any pictures?
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31st December 05, 08:06 PM
#28
Me too Brian,
But then my boys BEG me NOT to squish them up in pants...they wanna swing free...so I put on a kilt.
For outside the house knockaround kilting its usually my blue denim UK, the equivalent of blue jeans with FREEDOM.
Ron
Ol' Macdonald himself, a proud son of Skye and Cape Breton Island
Lifetime Member STA. Two time winner of Utilikiltarian of the Month.
"I'll have a kilt please, a nice hand sewn tartan, 16 ounce Strome. Oh, and a sporran on the side, with a strap please."
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31st December 05, 11:38 PM
#29
![Quote](http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/images/misc/quote_icon.png) Originally Posted by GlassMan
Of course, I also love all the ritual involved in pipe smoking.
I don't smoke, but I know what you mean: I grind fresh coffee every morning with a hand grinder. It takes a short time when I make course-ground press coffee, and several minutes of cranking to make Turkish coffee. It's all part of the ritual.
As for dressing with kilts: I think it's so much easier! Especially in the summertime, when I only wear two items of clothing: a tee-shirt and a kilt. Sandals on the feet when I leave the house, and I'm dressed! In the winter, a shirt, a kilt, a sweater, and kilt hose. Still no more time than if I were wearing trousers. Since I wear kilts all the time, and haven't worn trousers in over two years, I've just gotten rid of shirts that don't go with kilts. Only solid colours or very subtle woven patterns. I rarely have to dress up now that I don't work in an office, but when I did, it was still fewer items of clothing to put on than if I were wearing trousers. I don't have to think at all to match clothing in a kilt, because I don't have anything that doesn't go with my kilts!
Andrew.
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