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10th March 08, 07:20 PM
#1
P.S. Would you please speak to a few of our wives about buying their husbands a kilt? They need some guidance.
Jim Killman
Writer, Philosopher, Teacher of English and Math, Soldier of Fortune, Bon Vivant, Heart Transplant Recipient, Knight of St. Andrew (among other knighthoods)
Freedom is not free, but the US Marine Corps will pay most of your share.
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10th March 08, 08:14 PM
#2
Hi Pat, again welcome to the board from another Georgian (from Snellville!)
You have received a lot of great feedback here. What I can share with you is the road I took. The heat in Atlanta can sometimes be too much for the wool kilt (for me anyway). What I started with was a Stillwater heavy weights to be sure I would still wear the kilt after a while. As Jim stated before, the biggest cost fo the kilt is the hose, the sporran and all of the fixins!
From there, you can look at USA kilts options in the poilyvis or you can contact Matt Newsome for a wool kilt in the 5 yard or the 4 yard box pleat that he specializes in.
At the end of the day though, there is nothing like a full 13 or 16 oz 8 yard kilt to really make a guy stand proud!
"A veteran, whether active duty, retired, national guard or reserve, is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America", for an amount of "up to and including my life." That is honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it." anon
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11th March 08, 12:09 AM
#3
Welcome,from a stormy Inverness-shire.You have been given good advice in the threads above.The one thing I would add is this.Don't get too wound up about how old a tartan is,they were all new once and many are not as old as you might think.The Welsh tartan may be only,perhaps,30 years old.So what?The most important thing is to get the tartan that your husband will be happy to wear and with a bit of luck it will be one that you really like too.Good luck to you both and have fun.
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11th March 08, 07:40 AM
#4
Hot weather kilt for a welshman? Try the casual Welsh kilt from this site.
http://www.kilts-n-stuff.com/Kilts/welsh_kilts.html
I've dealt with these people before and they are friendly and fair. Also, I have found that Welsh tartans are exceptionally handsome. If his family name is not offered here, there are a few universal welsh tartans that he may enjoy. A green and red one comes to mind.
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11th March 08, 08:21 AM
#5
Welcome from West Virginia!
Have fun with the research & meeting all the great folks here!
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11th March 08, 08:27 AM
#6
I have no better advise to give so I'll just say...
Welcome to the neighborhood
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11th March 08, 09:00 AM
#7
from Chicago.
My brother live in Georgia and he swears by his Matt Newsome box pleat wool kilt. It's very comfortable in hot weather - has fewer layers than a 'standard' knife pleat kilt, AND, according to Matt, is really the more ancient form of the kilt.
Animo non astutia
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11th March 08, 09:20 AM
#8
Welcome from Wisconsin!
Can always make him an ever-fashionable duct tape kilt.
(Im still working on mine, actually)
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11th March 08, 09:45 AM
#9
 Originally Posted by McFarkus
 from Chicago.
My brother live in Georgia and he swears by his Matt Newsome box pleat wool kilt. It's very comfortable in hot weather - has fewer layers than a 'standard' knife pleat kilt, AND, according to Matt, is really the more ancient form of the kilt.
What the Evil Twin said. But I do also have a 13-oz 7 yard by Kiltstore that is very nice in warm Georgia weather, an 18-oz 4 yard box pleat that is also fine, three 16-oz 8-yarders by Barb Tewksbury (incomparable workmanship), and an 18-oz 8-yard military box pleat kilt under construction. I expect to wear them all in any weather (Don't forget Georgia does have 2 1/2 seasons besided summer).
The primary source of heat and sweat will be at the waistband and there isn't be much, if any difference there in heat retention between the light and heavyweight wools, but there is a difference in feel and comfort between the 4 (+/-) yard box pleated kilt and the 8 (+/-)yard knife pleated kilt. The 5+/- yard knife pleat that is typical of the casual kilt is a compromise I haven't looked into yet.
BTW, don't get hung up on 4 yards versus 5 or 8 versus 9. For a made-to-measure kilt, a kiltmaker uses just enough material to make a kilt to your husbands individual measurements. And if you choose to go made-to-measure, do make your move relatively soon if you want the kilt for events this summer. 8 weeks lead time is pretty typical, and Matt Newsome is in such demand that his lead time is 4-5 months. there is even a thread here somewhere about that (Matt Newsome Jonesing list).
And - Welcome to X-marks. I hope you and your husband join us for a nite of Great SEKS. (Great South-Eastern Kilt Society). You can get first-hand Q&A at one of our gatherings. Kilts not required for inquirers.
Convener, Georgia Chapter, House of Gordon (Boss H.O.G.)
Where 4 Scotsmen gather there'll usually be a fifth.
7/5 of the world's population have a difficult time with fractions.
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11th March 08, 10:17 AM
#10

from Northern Virginia!
You have gotten some great advice here but I'm going to repeat one piece you have already gotten more than once. You're in Georgia - take a day and drive up to Franklin NC and visit the Scottish Tartans Musem http://www.scottishtartans.org and chat with Matt Newsome. (XMarks member name M.A.C.Newsome) Matt is a tartan scholar, historian, kiltmaker AND the curator of the museum.
If you and your husband are like I was you want to see and touch and feel in person for the first kilt. You are lucky to have such a resource so close by.
You can also see Matt's personal website here: www.albanach.org
Good luck to you.
Dee
Ferret ad astra virtus
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