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When you put on your Clan's colors you are putting on your family's history. The tartan and subsequent highland dress should always be worn with dignity and with an understanding and observation of the tradition they represent. It is a uniform and an icon. People normally take immense care in correctly wearing proper Highland Dress, and that is what it deserves, because men have died in war wearing it and men and women suffered death, transportation, privation, and hardship because the tartan was their native wear and they refused to obey the 18th century ban on tartan promulgated by the Hanoverian Government after the 1745 Jacobite Rising failed. It is important to stress that Highland dress is referred to as "Scottish attire" both in Scotland, and by those of Scots descent or affiliation, around the world, and rightfully so. It is not a "costume, but attire, and it's important to remember this. (As J.C. Thompson says in his wonderful book "So, You're Going to Wear the Kilt?", "...The kilt is perfectly normal dress for any man of Scottish ancestry or connections, and anyone who feels differently is simply displaying their ignorance.")
Modern Highland Dress for MenHighland Dress is not just for special occasions. It can be worn at anytime. Men who wear the kilt regularly find that it is a sensible, comfortable garment which can be worn with ordinary shirts or sweaters. It does not necessarily need all of the accessories listed below. The Kilt is the most important item of highland dress. It usually reaches just to the top of, or slightly above, the knee. There is often a kilt pin attached to the front flap for decoration. What you do or don’t wear under the kilt is your own business. A good Scotsman will not tell when asked. (When asked what is worn under the kilt, especially by a lady, a typical reply is "nothing worn, m'am, everything is in perfect working order", usually accompanied by a wink). Any ordinary shirt or sweater may be worn with the kilt. Some men, when attending a very formal occasion in the evening, like to wear a lace jobot around the neckline, and sometimes frilled cuffs, and for very formal affairs a fly plaid which is pinned to the shoulder with a brooch and drapes behind. Others prefer a plain shirt and tie, or an evening dress shirt and bow tie. A belt is usually worn at the waist, over the kilt. The buckle is often brass or silver, and sometimes has detailed carving on it, or is set with a cairngorm, which is a semi-precious amber-colored stone found in the mountains of Scotland. Special
kilt jackets can be bought, which are jackets and blazers with a different
cut that those worn with trousers, and are usually shorter to better show
off the kilt. One for everyday wear could perhaps be a tweed jacket; another
for formal evening wear is often black, although other colors are sometimes
worn.
Some typical jackets are:
The
sgian dubh (skee-an doo), or black knife, is often worn by men in Highland
dress. The knife is tucked into the top of the right kilt hose, with just
the top of the shaft showing. Although the original purpose of the sgian
dubh was for skinning animals, it is nowadays largely ceremonial, although
it does make a useful pen-knife. For formal, full dress affairs one typically
will also see a jeweled "dirk" hanging from the belt. The dirk is a long
knife, or a short sword, depending on how one looks at it. The dirk was
the weapon of choice, and usually the first deployed, by the Highlanders
of old. Today, the dirk is ceremonial and typically is only seen for full
dress affairs and only with a Montrose or Sherrifmuir jacket. (It is recommended
by many, that while the Prince Charlie coat is formal dress, that it be
kept simple, and it is not recommended that one wear a dirk or a fly plaid
with it).
Many
women wear kilted tartan skirts, frequently mid-calf length, with
or without a kilt pin. Sporrans and kilts are never worn by women
unless required to do so as part of the uniform of a mixed pipe
band. A kilted tartan skirt is worn with the usual range of women’s
blouses, pullovers, and jackets; whatever is tasteful. Nowadays,
white gowns with tartan sashes are seen all over the world, especially
at Scottish Highland Balls and Dances. Sashes
are worn across the upper half of the dress, from the right shoulder
diagonally across to the left hip where the two ends are knotted
together. A brooch pins the sash to the shoulder. The wife of the
clan chief pins the sash to her left shoulder in opposition to the
position of her clanswomen’s sashes. A style
of dress known as Aboyne Dress is made up of a full-length tartan
skirt, a white blouse , and a velvet waistcoat with a pinned-on
sash. Pumps are also worn.
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