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Full Formal Kilt Outfit

Full Formal Kilt Outfit
Full Formal Kilt Outfit
Full Formal Kilt Outfit
Full Formal Kilt Outfit
Full Formal Kilt Outfit
£900.00
Ex Tax: £750.00
  • Model: Outfit

Available Options

This package contains the essentials for your kilt outfit. These should see you through a lifetime. 

All our kilts, kilt jackets, sporrans, and kilt pins are made in our Glasgow-based workshops. Accept no imitation in Scottish-made quality products!

Features:

  • a full 8-yard kilt in your choice of tartan (note that prices vary depending on the tartan range).
  • your choice of either a Prince Charlie or Argyll jacket and waistcoat. Formal jackets, although the Argyll will suit a variety of occasions. 
  • simple Bovine Dress Sporran with Celtic knot cantle in chrome finish (to match the buttons of the jacket).
  • black premium kilt hose.
  • Endrick Ghillie brogues.
  • Lion rampant kilt pin.
  • Option tartan flashes. If you don't select these we will add plain flashes to compliment the chosen tartan. 

All you will need to provide is a shirt and tie

This outfit deal is only available for these set items. Substitutions are only possible for like-for-like items (ie swapping hose colour or kilt pin) and we cannot remove items from this deal. 

Tartan Finder Disclaimer:

As each of the mills has supplied their own images, or they have been taken from fabric samples, please note that the setts are not to scale when comparing tartans of different mills. Also, as screen resolutions vary, colours may differ slightly from those seen here. If unsure, we’d encourage you to purchase a swatch of the fabric before buying. 

Kilt Measuring advice:

  • Waist: measure firmly around waist at navel (belly button) height.
  • Seat: measure around the largest part of the seat area.
  • Kilt Length: measure from over the very top of the hip at navel height (so the measure curves round the bone) to the top or middle of the knee. As a rule of thumb, your kilt length should be no shorter than a third of your height. It's always best to get someone to help with this measurement, as you'll lean forward and shorten the length when doing it yourself.
  • Height: provide this in feet and inches.

Don't worry if these seems daunting, it's not as hard as it might sound! We have many years experience making kilts for people of all sizes, and will check with you if anything seems unusual. 



Pleating at the back can either be 'to the sett' meaning it continues the pattern of the tartan, while 'to the stripe' means each pleat carries a uniform stripe from the tartan (see picture comparison above). You have the option to choose which colour stripe you'd like carried over in this option - just input which colour from your chosen tartan you'd like in the text box.

If you have any queries regarding the measurement process, the pleating options, or would like some additional information before placing your order please contact us.

Tartan Ranges supported (all pure wool) can be found under the tartan finder button. Prices vary depending on the range. 

What’s the difference?

Each mill uses different methods, looms and finishes on their cloth.

In general, heavyweight is perhaps the best material for making kilts, it looks and feels great, while also being fairly crease resistant (when the kilt is treated and kept properly anyway). However, it’s not always best for warm climates, and sometimes folk prefer a lighter option, so mediumweight is a great alternative. Lightweight would be recommended especially for very warm climates. 

Strathmore (W60) and House of Edgar (Mediumweight and Old and Rare - but not their Nevis, Hebridean or Emblem ranges) have a traditional selvedge made on a shuttle loom, which means the bottom of the cloth (and so the kilt) is exactly the same thickness as the rest of the cloth. These traditional edges are only available in the mediumweight cloths.

Marton Mills and Lochcarron use a tuck-in selvedge, where the end threads are ‘tucked’ back into the weave. This means the bottom half-inch of the cloth (and the kilt) can be a little thicker than the rest (not too much though, and not enough to distort the shape of the pleating at the back). It also means the tucked threads can poke up out of the cloth. 

Don’t worry if this doesn’t mean anything to you! Both are of kilting quality and produce a kilt that will last you a lifetime. The difference is subtle and can be apparent on close inspection, but not so much from a distance. 

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Tags: Kilt Outfit

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