What They Don't Say About The Kilt

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • The kilt, Scottish Highland dress is surrounded by rules and expectations, but who's are they? Scottish history tour guide Bruce Fummey visits a traditional kilt maker and looks at the history and rules of the kilt.
    How Walter Scott made us wear the kilt • Sir Walter Scott Made ...
    Find Marion's the Kilt College at www.scotlandhistorytours.co.uk/kiltmaking
    Three ways to support Scotland History Tours video productions at www.scotlandhi...
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    Here's a video explaining the three ways to help me make more videos • Crowdfunding Options t...
    Join The National Trust of Scotland and experience Scottish history in lots of many National Trust properties worth visiting. You can find out about National Trust for Scotland, it's properties and how to join here tidd.ly/3kuyDg3
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    Scotland History Tours is here for people who want to learn about Scottish history and get ideas for Scottish history tours. I try to make videos which tell you tales from Scotland's past and give you information about key dates in Scottish history and historical places to visit in Scotland. Not all videos are tales from Scotland's history, some of them are about men from Scotland's past or women from Scotland's past. Basically the people who made Scotland. From April 2020 onward I've tried to give ideas for historic days out in Scotland. Essentially these are days out in Scotland for adults who are interested in historical places to visit in Scotland.
    As a Scottish history tour guide people ask: Help me plan a Scottish holiday, or help me plan a Scottish vacation if your from the US. So I've tried to give a bit of history, but some places of interest in Scotland as well.

Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours
    @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +118

    How Walter Scott made us wear the kilt ruclips.net/video/TV-KMVWXZ9g/видео.html
    Find Marion's the Kilt College at www.scotlandhistorytours.co.uk/kiltmaking

    • @snodrog5
      @snodrog5 2 года назад +4

      Thanks very much, Bruce and Marion!

    • @robertmaceanruig6291
      @robertmaceanruig6291 2 года назад +3

      You look at Romans, in History, no Panks Greek no panks 🥃🍺🇬🇧😇

    • @KortovElphame
      @KortovElphame 2 года назад +3

      Galicians wore kilt centuries b4 Scots. Tartan Authority confirms this . What the Scots wore was basically a toga.
      The Galicians wore a skirt proper .

    • @grahamc9890
      @grahamc9890 2 года назад

      Ur full of shit history is written by the winners we lost so the English made a lot of this bullshit up

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 2 года назад +1

      "There are no surviving photographs". Anyone would think you disappeared them all 😅👍

  • @serenaandme6712
    @serenaandme6712 2 года назад +267

    My father was an Argyll and Sutherland Highlander. After Dunkirk, a lot of the English regiments were depleted and they decided to take a hundred Argylls and put them in the Royal Artillery. They only agreed to this as long as they kept their kilts and cap badges. They were the regiment that discovered Belsen concentration camp. Dad married an English girl during the war and was married in his uniform with kilt. Fortunately, she was handy with a needle and made kilts for both Dad and myself. In 1962, we migrated to Australia but Dad still wore his kilt to every special occasion. When he died, he was buried in a suit (his choice) so that his kilts could be handed down, first to me and later to his grandson who wore it when he travelled back to Scotland.

    • @XOguitargurlOX
      @XOguitargurlOX Год назад +3

    • @LeeGee
      @LeeGee Год назад +7

      When my late grandfather moved south after the war, he wore his Gordan Highlanders kilt to every Burns' Night. I treasure the photographs of him and the piper of the haggis.

    • @jmsuther01
      @jmsuther01 Год назад +5

      Kin! ❤ although I’m from the Caribbean my father’s ancestors are from that clan and we still carry the name.

    • @la_old_salt2241
      @la_old_salt2241 6 месяцев назад

      Love the family story, thank you for sharing!

    • @kmos1948
      @kmos1948 5 месяцев назад

      Wonderful family stories, traditions

  • @elainepencek3155
    @elainepencek3155 2 года назад +133

    Several years ago, my son (Polish-Greek-German 😂😂) came home and asked me to make him a kilt as he was going to participate in a Highland Games competition. On Saturday. It was Wednesday. I sew a lot, it is a pleated skirt, how hard can it be?? Obviously I knew nothing. So I looked it up to get some hints. Oh my word!!! This is hard! People apprentice for years to learn this skill! My husband said, “Well, you’ve got 2 days.” 😂😩 Late nights, but I did it. No way near professional, but I tried to follow the rules and it came out great. He got a ton of compliments and he is so proud of it. That’s all I care about. Interesting history lesson.

    • @LeeGee
      @LeeGee Год назад +11

      The Greek fustanella is *almost* a kilt.

    • @TingTingalingy
      @TingTingalingy Год назад +4

      My Gramma a Scottish woman and very skilled seamstress wouldn't even bother making kilts because of exactly what you mentioned 😆 she respected anyone who ever tried to make one. Much respects madam, that's one frickin cool story

    • @CrackedCandy
      @CrackedCandy 9 месяцев назад +1

      So, uh, up for a second Kilt?

  • @liampaterson3424
    @liampaterson3424 2 года назад +878

    One of my great-grandfathers was in the Black Watch in WW1 and he asked a sergeant about the kilt's obvious drawbacks in trench warfare. The sergeant's response was 'see when ye raid a trench laddie and ye meet a German? Well y'll both cack yerselves but for you it'll jist fa' oot and then he'll be jumping aboot with his breeks full and then you kin bayonet the bugger.' Not the sort of thing military histories tend to mention...

    • @douglasherron7534
      @douglasherron7534 2 года назад +95

      My great-uncle served with the 8th (Service) Battalion. Here's a quote from the Wauchope history of that battalion - talking about an episode from early July 1915:
      "War, however, was found to have a humorous as well as a serious side, and all ranks chuckled when Sergeant McHardy, machine gun section, had to go kiltless because the kilt which he had hung up to dry was blown away by a shell."

    • @jimbob465
      @jimbob465 2 года назад +1

      Rather than trying to write shit in phonics, just write in English and we can all understand what the fuck you are saying.

    • @coppertopv365
      @coppertopv365 2 года назад +59

      @@douglasherron7534 that would be a bugger to go on a bare ass charge into Germany lines

    • @douglasherron7534
      @douglasherron7534 2 года назад +21

      @@coppertopv365 😂 Yes! Especially with all that barbed-wire about.... Might give the Hun a bit of a shock though (visions of "Carry-on Up The Khyber"!).

    • @ibexking69
      @ibexking69 2 года назад +10

      Yes I understood that?

  • @randalalansmith9883
    @randalalansmith9883 2 года назад +196

    Basically, the same thing happened to kimono. It was once everyday dress, then banned for a bit, then resurrected as prescribed formal dress for heritage events. Where once you dressed according to your class, you now dress according to occasion.

    • @Oooo-bi7bi
      @Oooo-bi7bi 2 года назад +7

      That’s interesting, it’s human behaviour I suppose.

    • @napoleonfeanor
      @napoleonfeanor Год назад +11

      It is quite different though. The Japanese never had foreigners enforce it. Also, having specific ritual types of kimono have a long tradition among the classes where it was economically possible. Having special types of dress codes for ceremonies and sacred spaces is something widespread all over the world.

    • @persnikitty3570
      @persnikitty3570 Год назад +8

      Also, the kimono bows used to be in the front, then gradually moved to the back so they could both be grander, and appeal to the flat front. Since not all women are the same, methods were devised to grant the more buxom a flat front for the kimono, something still used today.

    • @joegroves1519
      @joegroves1519 Год назад

      Yeah, that’s not really true at all. During the Meiji Restoration, Japan wanted to modernize (read by many as ‘westernize’). The Kimono and ‘traditional’ clothing was “frowned upon” as they tried to modernize, but it was never legally “banned.”
      Kimonos were basically worn at ALL stations of life/class; they higher classes just had fancier kimonos and accessories.

  • @kathleenmccrory9883
    @kathleenmccrory9883 2 года назад +118

    The original kilt was truly a wonder garment. When you wrap yourself in wet wool, the wool produces heat as it dries, at the same time it draws moisture to its own center, keeping you warm and dry. Wool can also keep you cool. Nature's insulator.

    • @douglasherron7534
      @douglasherron7534 2 года назад +21

      Wool garments have a natural water repellent quality (and in the old days this was probably even better due to less of the natural oils being washed out during production). Therefore, unless it was really belting down, you would have remained relatively dry underneath a multi-layered wool kilt.

    • @gustavmeyrink_2.0
      @gustavmeyrink_2.0 2 года назад +7

      @@douglasherron7534 you can buy lanolin and put the oils back into the fabric.

    • @douglasherron7534
      @douglasherron7534 2 года назад +8

      @@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Sure, but I don't think that would have been possible (or necessary) in the Highlands pre-1746.

    • @johnh.tuomala4379
      @johnh.tuomala4379 2 года назад +18

      Ask any sheep.

  • @seamasrigh2162
    @seamasrigh2162 2 года назад +34

    Hello Bruce, I have worn the kilt since my mid-twenties, nearly 40 years ago. The basic rule I follow is "It's not a costume. It's in memory and to the honor of my ancestors. If it looks good - do it." Cheers.

  • @ReconstructingHist
    @ReconstructingHist 2 года назад +380

    Hi Bruce. I'm a clothing historian and the first article I ever published was titled "The Evolution of the Kilt". I'm not a kilt expert, but I have a great fondness for it. But what I am passionate about is bespoke tailoring and the cottage industry for garment making. Thank you for supporting small makers and encouraging your subscribers to do so also. It's not just good for the small business owners. Bespoke clothing is good for the environment because it reduces waste and clothing lasts longer. And bespoke tailors can rather famously make a hunchback look like a supermodel. So it's good for our self esteem too. Bravo, Bruce. And thank you. Kass McGann of Reconstructing History.

    • @MrTrilbe
      @MrTrilbe 2 года назад +19

      Also the most important thing about bespoke clothing... it fits you just right especially if you're tall and/or broad chested and in some cases it gives you a better range of motion or at least more comfortable range of motion, no more t-shirts riding up when you put your arms over your head or jumper sleeves that pull too far up the arm or cover your hands, no more trousers that are too restrictive in the... legs, I have fat thighs ok, don't know what you were thinking i was thinking about.

    • @irene3085
      @irene3085 2 года назад +6

      @@MrTrilbe yeah legs. Totally what I was thinking 😀

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 2 года назад +3

      You actually think you're saying something profound? EVERYONE would prefer to have 'bespoke' clothing. Do you anything about it...at all? New York garment district has fabric that 'bespoke' tailors use. It starts at about $600 a YARD. How many pairs of socks can you afford?

    • @MrTrilbe
      @MrTrilbe 2 года назад +19

      @@debbylou5729 1) it's "Do you KNOW anything about it", 2) Manhattan Garment District, 3) bespoke means made to measure, if i make myself a t-shirt it's bespoke and if i can get dyed cotton for £5.50 (after taxes) for a 0.5m by 1.5m bolt, you picked a product specifically to say no one but the rich can afford it, or trained tailors can make clothes, 4) Profound, i think you need to look that up in a dictionary, no one in this particular message thread has said anything that has show great knowledge or insight, they have just pointed out that getting clothes made for you, by anyone, means they will fit better than off the rack clothing, that's made for a mathematically impossible to find average, 5) I would say have a nice day, but you don't appear to be a nice person, i'll say instead, may you live in interesting times.

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 2 года назад +3

      @@MrTrilbe oh, so you're petty. You might have yours turned off or maybe you don't know about it , but there's this thing called spell check that sometimes doesn't. You are describing home made....ask anyone. The GARMENT DISTRICT is a neighborhood in New York City. Ever been ? I lived in Fairfield Connecticut and went several times. I've seen clothing since I was 16 and just because I made items to fit doesn't make them bespoke. A typical bespoke shirt from a tailor begins at around $600 up to $1000. I'm happy you learned a new word 'bespoke' but the fact that this is your direction is funny. Most people I know that buy 'off the rack' take the items to a tailor (not a dry cleaner's alterations department) and have the item adjusted to fit them. You might be a great little seamstress, but with out the training you aren't a tailor

  • @rosseastman2134
    @rosseastman2134 2 года назад +69

    I'm from Cornwall, and love visiting Scotland (and Scottish history). While Cornwall has a rich past, somewhat divided from England, Scotland has such a strong feeling of being connected to it's historical and cultural identity. It's fantastic to hear you speak so eloquently and interestingly about this particular subject. Thanks so much!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +6

      Thanks

    • @Oooo-bi7bi
      @Oooo-bi7bi 2 года назад +2

      I was staying with friends in Pendeen for months, 20 years ago. I think the last fluent Kernow Gaelic speaker was very old or had passed. The coastal people of the island had more in common with each other than those nearer to them inland.

    • @Marie-Elaine
      @Marie-Elaine Год назад +6

      There is a Cornish Kilt. When my Mum remarried her friends husband, who is Cornish wore it.

    • @talflick
      @talflick Год назад +3

      My father wore the Cornish tartan at his wedding to my mum, and I'll wear the same tartan when I marry my fiancée. It's a beautiful tartan.

    • @LeeGee
      @LeeGee Год назад +1

      @@Marie-Elaine There is a Cornish kilt, in a yellow and black 'tartan,' but there no records of it before the 20th century.

  • @nomansland4811
    @nomansland4811 2 года назад +44

    Whatever your country or culture, it’s important to keep traditional dress and customs alive. Love kilt history and such a fan of plaids and tartans.

  • @rickmoore3730
    @rickmoore3730 2 года назад +52

    At 63 I tried on my first " kilt" at a highlands games in Canada . Three and a half years later I have 18 wool kilts including three 4 yd. box pleated kilts . I haven't worn trousers for two years now and probably never will . The first thing I did was educate myself to find out how to wear it as so many people instantly offered advice that I knew didn't have a clue .I have also seen many people on RUclips and various forums that are very " sticky beak " about how someone should wear highland dress . I found my own way that is respectful and looks right and am not apposed to bending the current " rules " . I wish I had started kilting a long time ago but am grateful to Scotland for such a fantastic form of dress that allows an incredible variation in men's fashion that is not possible elsewhere . Thanks for a video that caught me by surprise . I think I owe you another coffee . Cheers Bruce

    • @Davidinkilt
      @Davidinkilt 9 месяцев назад +3

      Bonsoir depuis le sud de la France, je vous écris en français je ne suis pas assez fort en anglais même si j'ai des notions, ; moi-même je suis porteur de kilts au quotidien depuis 5 ans après avoir été porteur occasionnel pendant dix ans. Oui, c'est un vêtement fantastique, qui allie élégance, virilité (les femmes adorent), et confort incroyable, liberté de mouvements sans équivalents. Mes kilts sont des tartans traditionnels ou des utily-kilts en tissus unis, j'en ai aussi 4 en cuir. Je ne porte plus de pantalons, ni de shorts, ni de bermudas (je les ai tous donné), je vais au travail en utily-kilts.
      L'occasion pour moi d'en finir avec la dictature du "torture tube fabric" alias le pantalon.
      Le port du kilt commence à se développer ici en France, des associations ont déposé de nombreux tartans. j'ai lu votre témoignage avec un grand plaisir, bravo et bonne continuation.

    • @rickmoore3730
      @rickmoore3730 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Davidinkilt I don't speak French ( I wish I did ) but know enough words to understand most of what you said . I will get one or two lines translated to fully appreciate your post but is sounds like you running pretty much the same path as me . I hope you are having a great Christmas . Cheers

    • @skullduggerysmiles8393
      @skullduggerysmiles8393 8 месяцев назад +3

      Hello and got to say I totally endorse your eloquent statement.

  • @allisonshaw9341
    @allisonshaw9341 2 года назад +129

    I wear a tartan sash pinned with a broach as part of my Cherokee regalia as a nod to my father's people, and have worn this to both Native American powwows and Highland/Scots cultural events here in the States. Even met The Shaw at the highland Games in North Carolina and he seemed to appreciate it. All in all, it's been positive and I'm sure someone would correct me were I wearing it wrong.
    I like to think that ancestors on both sides feel honored.
    As for those Scots in the military, every history I've read spoke of their courage, ferocity, and ability to scare the hell out of the enemy. I remember one comedy skit about the Highland regiments by Billy Connolly where he said that when situation required some bloody balls, you didn't send in a Nigel, you sent in an Angus.

    • @christabell-zc9rn
      @christabell-zc9rn Год назад +1

      Here in America tartan is called plaid. Plaid is actually what you are wearing as a sash .

    • @helenelliott2375
      @helenelliott2375 Год назад +6

      @@christabell-zc9rn tartan sounds better than plaid

    • @helenbryden2669
      @helenbryden2669 Год назад +2

      Tartan and plaid are 2 different patterns.

    • @allisonshaw9341
      @allisonshaw9341 Год назад +3

      @@christabell-zc9rn What I am wearing is a tartan sash, not a plaid.

    • @TingTingalingy
      @TingTingalingy Год назад

      ​@@allisonshaw9341since when were the injuns tied into tartans? Is it like the Maasi type deal?

  • @timesthree5757
    @timesthree5757 2 года назад +20

    Many of us hillbillies in the Appalachia, Ozarks, Ouachita mountains still were kilts. Some wear them often, some on special.

    • @lindickison3055
      @lindickison3055 9 месяцев назад

      Flora would be proud😊

    • @RainCheck797
      @RainCheck797 9 месяцев назад +3

      There is *a lot* of Scottish history and culture in the American South that is overlooked or forgotten. It's just so ingrained.
      Even Texas has a registered Tartan and nearly half their cities named after Scots people or words.
      I heard a theory (can't confirm or deny) that classes "Southern Hospitality" was influenced by Scottish culture.

    • @edcrichton9457
      @edcrichton9457 8 месяцев назад +1

      Many being the descendants of confusingly named Scots Irish. A term which only gets used in USA.

    • @CowgirlWren
      @CowgirlWren 2 месяца назад

      Many of Scots-Irish/Ulster-Scots descent

  • @TadeuszCantwell
    @TadeuszCantwell 2 года назад +177

    Fascinating video. Other YT videos kept talking about anachronistic the kilt was for a certain time period without explaining why. This finally explains how the kilt evolved into it's current form.

    • @FacesintheStone
      @FacesintheStone 2 года назад +10

      Fascinating information shared. Thank you , your passion is inspiring.

    • @KittyStarlight
      @KittyStarlight 2 года назад +5

      Going back to earlier periods (pre-45-rebellion) it's not that the kilt was so anachronistic or something, it's that the old tartans from back then have mostly been lost.
      Going into the decades following the 'Forty-five, then we have the forbidding of the kilt, the tartans, weapons and so on (unless of course you were in the British army).
      Then a bit later comes the huge popularity in England and lowland Scotland of *almost everything* Highland Scottish. Passion for everything Highland including the kilt.
      Eventually later on then you get more of the Highlanders (and those with Highland ancestry all over the world) joining in too.
      And yes, they are very definitely supposed to explain that, like he did here.

    • @KittyStarlight
      @KittyStarlight 2 года назад +2

      The actual history of the kilt itself is older than most of what he's talking about.
      This video is primarily about the renewed interest in the kilt, tartan patterns and all things Scottish and Highland, which developed into what we have today.
      And yes, he was very definitely right to mention that the British army is basically what kept the wearing of the kilt alive until everybody else could get in on the act.
      But the actual history of the kilt begins long before this. This is mostly just the history of its *revival* in comparatively modern times.

    • @KittyStarlight
      @KittyStarlight 2 года назад +4

      The people who talk about "how anachronistic the kilt was for a certain time period without explaining why".
      If it's the period from 1746 to about the early 1800's or so then they are assuming that everyone with any knowledge of Scottish history about that period *already knows* perfectly well why.
      And it is explained in many other places online including Wikipedia and a multitude of other websites.
      So they may actually have a right to suppose that you already know.
      On the other hand, if you *didn't* already know then you're certainly not going to learn much about it from them.
      So I am glad that there are people on RUclips remembering to keep people informed about that sort of thing.
      Apparently not everyone already knows.

  • @LoveMusic-pd5iz
    @LoveMusic-pd5iz 2 года назад +19

    Your comment about "stack 'em high, sell 'em cheap" is so true and, unfortunately, it is true of most clothing, not just kilts. The demand and respect for bespoke and learning high quality clothing creation at home is shrinking dramatically. There is actually a global glut, mountains of cast-off clothing. Thank you for your educational talk about quality kilts and their history - and for introducing Marion and her classes.

  • @999Giustina
    @999Giustina 2 года назад +177

    This really explains some of the difficulties I had when trying to make my own plaid skirt. After a lot of difficulty finding quality fabric, I ended up hand stitching my own design and hoping I won't offend any Scottish people. I'm happy to hear I probably was on the right track, making a quality garment I'm proud to wear.

    • @notlikely4468
      @notlikely4468 2 года назад +32

      Meh....if anyone gives you grief
      A Glasgow kiss will set them right

    • @sierralarars
      @sierralarars 2 года назад +39

      If they are offended tell them to buggar off, sincerely a Scottish lass.

    • @ThimbleFox350
      @ThimbleFox350 2 года назад

      post skirt pic/vid pls

    • @victordefinitely2165
      @victordefinitely2165 2 года назад +8

      @@sierralarars aye

    • @ian2armannduccio
      @ian2armannduccio 2 года назад +10

      Interesting, Americans really do say "plaid skirt". I thought Robbie Coltrane was joking.

  • @lawrencescales9864
    @lawrencescales9864 Год назад +29

    I found your channel through Tasting History. I’ve been watching it constantly since. Great content and story telling, always insightful! Much love from a fellow tour guide 👍🏼

  • @faithhowe6170
    @faithhowe6170 2 года назад +132

    Years ago, when my son got into competing in the Highland Games, I made him a kilt in our "family tartan", with no experience or pattern to follow. It would have been much easier with Marion's instruction I'm sure, but it did turn out good. Another interesting video, Thank you.

    • @huntclanhunt9697
      @huntclanhunt9697 2 года назад +12

      "Clan tartans" aren't really historical so colors shouldn'tt matter.

    • @angr3819
      @angr3819 2 года назад +11

      @@huntclanhunt9697 Last year I saw a lady wearing a plaid the same as that of one of my paternal line. It turned out she was from a village in Central Europe and it was also their tartan.
      Have you ever looked at the two tartan found with the truly ancient natural mummies of the Tarim Basin?

  • @RT-mn2pb
    @RT-mn2pb 2 года назад +10

    I'm not a kilt guy myself, though my buddy Jerry is, who is fiercely proud of his scots heritage. And he cuts a fair profile in hi kilt. I di wear one at his wedding, which my wife loved. I do enjoy your passion for home made quality an skill. Craftsmanship is a wonder to behold, and a joy to do.

  • @iosis2009
    @iosis2009 2 года назад +101

    cheers, Bruce, for making scottish history accessible to more and making it exciting to learn.

  • @callusklaus2413
    @callusklaus2413 2 года назад +17

    God, your storytelling is incredible.
    There's a saying that goes the son tries to forget, the grandson tries to remember. To blend in to their new home, my grandparents did not give as much as they may have to my dad.
    Thanks for helping me remember. It's important and interesting to me to know about this excellent garment.
    Cheers and keep yourself safe!

  • @demolama
    @demolama 2 года назад +42

    One thing I love about USAkilts is that they are more than just a kilt making company and their youtube videos are more than just how to wear a kilt. They talk about history and tradition but also modern practicality and everyday wear. So thanks for this video Bruce. It adds to the discussion of kilts as a practical garment

    • @brendangormley3117
      @brendangormley3117 2 года назад +5

      Also their customer service (at least as far as I've experienced it) is great

  • @garymacdonald7165
    @garymacdonald7165 2 года назад +18

    Standing at the top of Arthur's seat,overlooking Edinburgh,on a windy day,wearing a kilt,is one of the most horrific experiences known to man!

    • @mikemilne
      @mikemilne Год назад +6

      The one and only time I've worn a kilt in public with no drawers underneath, I went to visit a lighthouse on the Oregon coast. Wind gave me some problems as i approached the place but I thought they'd be over once i got inside.
      HOWEVER... this lighthouse sent visitors up the central spiral staircase in groups, so I made sure I was the last person going up. After a few steps another group began to form below. Naturally they watched our group ascend while they awaited their turn. This is when I realized the folly of my clothing choice.
      A few more steps and I also discovered that a strong breeze gusts up the center of a lighthouse, and if you're wearing a dress, skirt or kilt, you WILL have a Marilyn Monroe experience. And if you're not wearing underwear, and a group of people are already looking up your kilt from below, well... They certainly were treated to a show that day, not only once but several times, in addition to the comedy of me trying to fight the good fight. But as the man said, "Ah cannae change that laws of physics, Captain!"

    • @LivingInTheShade
      @LivingInTheShade Год назад +3

      @@mikemilne Hilarious 😂

  • @pUnPoetic
    @pUnPoetic 2 года назад +22

    I knew the kilt wass victim of the military and commercialization but I didn't realize quite the extent. Cheers from Canada (roots in Scotland some generations ago) on another wonderful, informative video!

    • @SoundLad123
      @SoundLad123 Год назад

      the kilt is not a victim of militarisation. the military are now pretty much the only group that wear highland dress in all its forms correctly. They're the ones to look to for those interested in looking smart

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  10 месяцев назад

      @pUnPoetic Come to one of my live shows in Canada in 2024. Shows in Halifax, Annapolis, New Glasgow, Moncton, Montreal, Perth , Ottawa, Toronto, Fergus, Seaforth, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria. Most of the details are here. www.brucefummey.co.uk/shows.aspx

  • @kashishimotohoward
    @kashishimotohoward 2 года назад +32

    I think I mentioned this in another video, I wear kilts daily, and rules be damned, I do what's comfortable for me. I love your content, huge fan!!

  • @robsvideos1140
    @robsvideos1140 2 года назад +9

    I had a beautiful kilt built for me by a bespoke tailor in New York. It honors my military service with the U.S. Air Force tartan. I also have a Black-watch tartan kilt to honor my great-grandfather who was a Gordon Highlander in WW1. Another great video Bruce.

    • @rcr76
      @rcr76 2 года назад +1

      Must have been a north east lad being a Gordon

    • @MmeRougarou
      @MmeRougarou Год назад

      Im from the Gordon clan as well. Take care out there.

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 Год назад

      Impressive
      lineage.

  • @StuartMerideth
    @StuartMerideth Год назад +2

    I wear a kilt daily. Granted, it *is* mass-produced, but I've never been happier or more comfortable than I am when I wear it. Thank you for this video, sir!

  • @vespadavidson2315
    @vespadavidson2315 2 года назад +36

    I’m Irish. I wear a plain coloured kilt, black or green every day. I run my own farm. Boots, no socks. My family are original Campbells. You know, before we sent a few to live in Scotland.

    • @alanwilkin8869
      @alanwilkin8869 2 года назад +9

      Ha ha ha ha your welcome tae them back cousin.

    • @vespadavidson2315
      @vespadavidson2315 2 года назад +5

      @@alanwilkin8869 all yon Scots came from here. For years I thought Scotland and Australia were the same place. Where one sent the bad lads……..😂.

    • @tjleonard5254
      @tjleonard5254 Год назад +2

      My mother was a Campbell!

    • @rosaliehagart1888
      @rosaliehagart1888 Год назад +2

      @@tjleonard5254
      Shshshshsh

    • @rosaliehagart1888
      @rosaliehagart1888 Год назад

      The Campbells are coming, you can tell by the smell.
      The dirty rascals are smelling like hell.
      A wee rhyme I mind fae a wis wee....

  • @GregSmithPhD
    @GregSmithPhD 2 года назад +7

    Such an inspirational video. So glad my wife made my kilts. She learned from videos and the kilts are awesome, including the final one, where she went back to basics and made a box pleated model.

  • @claudinedecarlisle8647
    @claudinedecarlisle8647 Год назад +4

    Hi Bruce. I so enjoyed your Burns reading on Max's haggis video that I had to visit your channel..
    This video was fascinating. I love the history knowledge and your humor.
    Looking forward to more. All the best.

  • @deadlycrispy8545
    @deadlycrispy8545 2 года назад +5

    just moved up to Scotland from the north of England and absolutely love it here, Thank you for your informative video will be keeping an eye out for more and looking back on what you have uploaded. Your character captures what I have experienced living here so far what an amazing person you are thank you

  • @AK-ks1kq
    @AK-ks1kq 2 года назад +56

    The great kilt reminds me of a tartan blanket/shawl my granny securely wrapped around me and my baby niece(I was nine). It didn't need a belt and was a way of carrying bairns while working around the house.

    • @sharonalexander4327
      @sharonalexander4327 2 года назад +8

      My granny did the same, I remember my wee sister getting wrapped up in her plaid (plide) stuck to my gran, bit like a papoose or a kanga 😆

    • @AK-ks1kq
      @AK-ks1kq 2 года назад +3

      @@sharonalexander4327 can you remember how to wrap? I can't, it was so quick/ efficient xo

    • @sharonalexander4327
      @sharonalexander4327 2 года назад +4

      Afraid not, i was about 8 when she did it and she passed away when I was 14 so I didn't get a chance to ask her, she was a wee feisty Irish woman. Suppose you could google it

    • @AK-ks1kq
      @AK-ks1kq 2 года назад +2

      @@sharonalexander4327 Thank You

    • @patriciaecampbell372
      @patriciaecampbell372 2 года назад +3

      my daughter did this with her daughter.

  • @kingscorpion7346
    @kingscorpion7346 2 года назад +11

    Hi Bruce! I live in Texas, and I am of Scottish decent. about 10 years ago I started wearing kilts, more for comfort reasons than for cultural reasons. since I learned I was of Scottish decent since I was little, I was always interested in wearing them, but everyone I knew then were very judgmental and all, and there were no kilt makers in America at the time. Today, there are many kilt makers in America, most that I read up on got started in 1995, the same year two great movies came out: Braveheart and Rob Roy. Now they are all I wear, and people come up to me all the time and talk to me about it.

  • @hazelpixie56
    @hazelpixie56 Год назад +7

    I cracked up so hard when you tried a pirouette, I did pretty much the same thing when I tried taking ballet. Lasted 3 weeks and got tired of falling flat on my face in front of the whole class. And there wasn't even a kilt involved! Love how you explain things

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  Год назад +1

      😜

    • @lyndavonkanel8603
      @lyndavonkanel8603 Год назад +1

      I'd always wanted to take ballet. Finally, classes were available at the university so I signed up for the second level, first level being filled. First day of class, happy and excited I started. In short order I fell twice. The instructor came over to me and asked what was I doing in this class, and told me I should be in the first level. That was the end of classes for me. Oh, well.

  • @shannon3944
    @shannon3944 2 года назад +6

    This really scratches my 'an item, especially a necessity, that has multiple uses is invaluable' itch, lol. (I've always thanked & credited my Irish ancestors for that💚.)
    Thank you so very much for sharing and teaching so much the traditions, the nuanced and everyday-type stuff...one of the best storytellers I've ever listened to.

  • @JR-bj3uf
    @JR-bj3uf 2 года назад +129

    I play in a local police pipe band and so I know well the rules of Highland dress. To visualize, our uniform is a dark blue, long sleeve, police tunic with a solid black tie. There is a shield and appropriate agency badges. The kilt is Ramsay Ancient tartan combined with ancient blue hose, thin blue line flashes and well polished ghellie brogues. It's all topped off with a black glengarry sporting a agency badge. I tell you this to set the scene. I was walking to my car after a gig. I had my pipe case and I was walking rather briskly, swinging my kilt. I met two gentlemen coming toward me. One of them stopped and addressed me directly. He said "you look sharp!" And I did. The funny thing was. This was on Tribal land in Oklahoma.

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 2 года назад +29

      To be fair, tribal peoples often respect one another, unlike “civilized” people

    • @frankieamsden7918
      @frankieamsden7918 2 года назад +35

      As a person of Native American descent that makes total sense to me. Anyone who has been to a Powow knows we love our bright colors and designs and appreciate craftsmanship!

    • @user-bo3mp8un6c
      @user-bo3mp8un6c 2 года назад +7

      ​@@bendover9813 Id say history begs to disagree

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 2 года назад +1

      Ah. There we go. It's a highland 'dress'.

    • @kevinhendryx665
      @kevinhendryx665 2 года назад +7

      @@bendover9813 This has indeed been my experience, when attending pow-wows in Highland garb.

  • @southernblueblood5402
    @southernblueblood5402 Год назад +9

    I wore my clan kilt at my wedding, it was the Edinburgh district tartan and sewn in Scotland. This or Nithsdale were my only choice at the time, however we finally have our own tartan and is registered with the tartan authority.

  • @markfouracres2459
    @markfouracres2459 2 года назад +30

    Can’t thank you enough for the wonderful insight into the history of our wonderful islands and in-depth of Scotland, I am a man of Kent but have chosen to live in the borders for approximately 30 years and have made it my pleasure to visit and experience as much of Scotland as possible and continue to do so and your beautiful historical teaching’s have and continue to inherence the hole experience , many thanks indeed sir.
    Yours sincerely
    Mark Fouracres.

  • @praack4563
    @praack4563 2 года назад +6

    I remember as a child looking at an old book of my grandads that had pictures of the great kilts, the small wrap, trews - fascinating to a child in the US, excellent video BTW - fascinating

  • @christophermurphy9493
    @christophermurphy9493 2 года назад +9

    This guy is great, his warmth and storing telling are infectious. He smashes that wee ork Neil Oliver, get him on the telly.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +5

      Ah thanks man

    • @stevenb427
      @stevenb427 2 года назад +2

      Totally agree 💯. Heard Bruce last week on Sportsound and he fitted in to BBC Scotland like a glove! 🤙

  • @gilmills
    @gilmills 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for a great video above the kilt. & all of your videos about Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿. I'm a proud Scot now living in Australia 🇦🇺

  • @PilgrimKat
    @PilgrimKat Год назад +10

    What a wonderful video, so informative and such fantastic production quality. There aren't enough Scottish youtubers out there so I really appreciate what you're doing here :)

  • @lindaross783
    @lindaross783 Год назад +1

    I enjoyed this so much. I made my first kilt when I was twelve without a pattern. I hadn't sewn anything before. My teacher looked at me hard.My family is from Sutherland and Inverness but moved to the states as a small child. Loved your video! Many thanks!

  • @rmur4820
    @rmur4820 2 года назад +20

    Ok, I was a sideline watcher. You pulled me in. I hit the button. It's Shaun's fault, his video's led me here. LOL You are an amazing story teller! I enjoy learning of my heritage and you make it all so real.

  • @Krugoose
    @Krugoose 2 года назад +6

    Absolutely love your channel mate honestly can’t get enough. Please never change I’m now hunting for a auld kilt for my wedding next year! Thank you!!!!

  • @alecs6492
    @alecs6492 2 года назад +22

    My father was born in Scotland. He brought me a kilt for my 30th birthday. I wore it backwards (unknowingly) for a few hours before my dad told me it was backwards. 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @anthonyaguilar3949
    @anthonyaguilar3949 Год назад +1

    I was just in La Sylphide which made me curious about the history of kilts which is what brought me to this video and you really caught me off guard when you mentioned it! I wore the kind with only the back pleated.

  • @MacAisling
    @MacAisling 2 года назад +10

    I’m an American of Scottish decent on my mother’s side tracing back to the Highland clearances. I have worn a great kilt as cosplay for Renaissance Festivals, SF conventions, and fantasy combat events. Definitely comfortable in a campground setting, somewhat less so for driving a car.

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 2 года назад

      Nice thing about kilts is that you never have to worry about busting out the butt seam! But they do tend to be a bit drafty...

  • @MAMDAVEM
    @MAMDAVEM Год назад +2

    Great video Bruce, learned alot. I have worn my kilt at many a function outside of Scotland and there are always two questions that I get asked, the first is "what is worn under the kilt?", my answer was always, "nothing is worn, it's all in perfect working order". The second question was "is that the Mitchell tartan?" and my answer was "there is no Mitchell Tartan, iits a Wallace tartan, my Mither was a Wallace" Occasionally I's get a third question, "what is the knife in your sock for?" and my answer was "to stop people who what to check out the answer to my first question".

  • @par576
    @par576 2 года назад +66

    As a National Service Man in 1955 I was introduced to the kilt at Stirling Castle. The kilt had no straps and buckles but was secured by two pins at the top. The corporal in our squad gave a demonstration. 'Up on the table' he instructed and pointed at one of us. The poor guy leapt on to the table. The corporal wrapped the kilt around him. He secured the top pin making sure that the length was the middle of his kneecap. He then inserted the second pin. The soldier screamed. The corporal told him to shut up which he did. Demonstration over the subject took off the kilt. He had two holes in the top of his thigh, entrance and exit of the pin!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  2 года назад +14

      🤯

    • @mcgregorpiper
      @mcgregorpiper 2 года назад +2

      Very interesting
      I have lost a bit of weight and my kilts are a little too big and they bunch up on my waist.
      I might take off the straps, pin it, and cinch it with my belt

    • @coppertopv365
      @coppertopv365 2 года назад +5

      First introduction to a kilt was strangely in Germany, while in the US Army when a Friend who was into Rock music went to a shop and got a kilt to wear into a concert.. I went with and thought he was Loony getting a kilt for a rock concert. He wore shorts under the kilt but still the idea was strange to me then as it is now but I reckon some punk rockers or something have their own "Style"..

    • @ripadipaflipa4672
      @ripadipaflipa4672 2 года назад +1

      I still have one of those pins but no kilt to use it on 😂 or

    • @gonefishingtoday
      @gonefishingtoday Год назад +4

      @@coppertopv365 I wear a kilt to Drama all the time. Always get a great reaction. It's a great icebreaker too. Greeting from Celtic Ireland.

  • @clintmilner2365
    @clintmilner2365 Год назад

    Thank you for this quality video and narrative interlacing the history. It is much appreciated.

  • @gerryphilly53
    @gerryphilly53 2 года назад +7

    Thanks again for an interesting and fact-based video. Who would have thought that the history of the kilt through the 18th and 19th centuries would be so complex.

  • @dottieburton5501
    @dottieburton5501 Год назад +1

    Max from Max tasting history sent me over so glad he did I am going to enjoy learning about Scotland

  • @ianstruthers9530
    @ianstruthers9530 2 года назад +3

    Brilliant as ever Bruce, thank you for passing on your knowledge 👍

  • @Darvit_Nu
    @Darvit_Nu Год назад +1

    I'm a Suðrland & Young. So glad Max recommended your channel! I enjoy listening to you telling stories & learning our history. Thank you! ❤

  • @AERoyeaux
    @AERoyeaux 2 года назад +22

    Great video, I really need to see this. I've been wearing kits daily for just over a month and had no idea that it was linked to black folks so directly. Thanks for giving a black & British man even more confidence, knowledge, and ammunition to deal with the rare kilt police when they pop up.

    • @joltjolt5060
      @joltjolt5060 2 года назад +2

      Kilts were Egyptian, like bagpipes, brought by Scota, and look up tartan in the bible. It's north African.

    • @gcanaday1
      @gcanaday1 2 года назад +7

      @@joltjolt5060 say what
      Anyone can wrap a blanket around them. Tartan is literally Gàidhlig for "blanket," now go appropriate somewhere else.

    • @willemvandeursen3105
      @willemvandeursen3105 Год назад

      @@joltjolt5060 '
      You ruined your comment with your "the bible sez'.
      That aside: Homo sapiens has invented any type of loin & ass covering thinkable. It most probably goes back to the time when clothing became a habit: Prehistoric man started to wear a frontal flap for protection of the genitals (and in particular the testicals).
      People do not realize that originality rarely exists. What is original about the kilt is its definition: the method of stitching the fabric, the tartan and, as of the 18th century, the sporran.

  • @gearyb9870
    @gearyb9870 8 месяцев назад

    What an excellent and fascinating video! Thank you from a Texan with some Scottish ancestry. 💘💘

  • @lutilda
    @lutilda Год назад +3

    Love your videos! Not only are they informative but the cinematography is absolutely wonderful!

  • @dvig3261
    @dvig3261 Год назад +1

    As a non Scottish American, I found the accent difficult to cut through...praise God for captions!
    Sir, this video, I've stumbled across, captured my attention soundly. I thank you for the intricate detail you have shared. The work it demanded is obvious..well done!

  • @MrGF1582
    @MrGF1582 2 года назад +7

    Great video mate! I myself have the full Bonnie Prince Charlie plus! Have the over the shoulder throw with large brooch. As a member of the St Andrews Society of New York, I've gone formal many times. I've also gone casual with my Kilt on many more occasions. One notable was, that I flew back to NYC from London for the first "Tartan Day Parade" in the US, and marched alongside with the "Sean" (Sir Connery). I wear The Black Watch colors as my family was Black Watch and I was also military myself. Cheers to a great video! Slainte!

  • @anton18901
    @anton18901 Год назад

    Long time bagpiper from Pennsylvania, 🇺🇸
    Learned a lot. Well done.

  • @workingmothercatlover6699
    @workingmothercatlover6699 2 года назад +10

    I grew up with Dad wearing a kilt and playing his bagpipes. Often in the house. We went to Scottish Games and loved it. We lived close to the city cemetery and would often hear Dad playing in there. Sometimes we would go with him and have a blast. My two oldest siblings both learned to play the pipes and got into the high school pipe band. I nearly got in.
    I learned some highland dancing. Still remember a little.
    I am of the clan Douglas and I love my Scottish heritage.

  • @gloriamarrs3273
    @gloriamarrs3273 2 года назад +3

    My husbands family name is Marrs. They were under the Gordon plaid. We were in Scotland and found a kilt maker and he was nice enough to show us the Gordon plaid.
    What beautiful piece of fabric. 🤠💕

  • @heleneabergman
    @heleneabergman 2 года назад +5

    That original kilt with its folding and shoulder section reminds me of wrapping a sari. Interesting that different cultures should have developed a similar garment. Now I have to do some research about other instances of folding a single piece of cloth to make a shole garment. Thanks!

    • @TheGypsyVanners
      @TheGypsyVanners Год назад +1

      I have to look up the word - but there are animals around the world that would “appear” to be related but are similar but unique evolution of traits.

  • @karenlloyd945
    @karenlloyd945 Год назад +2

    I loved Marion's dress. Thank you for this video it was really interesting, shall look for more

  • @rexromana
    @rexromana Год назад +5

    I'm not Scottish as far as I know but I love wearing kilts. Modern or traditional, they're comfortable and functional.

  • @williamwood5310
    @williamwood5310 2 года назад +33

    I became aware of the myth regarding different clan tartan back in my early teens. I was disappointed when I didn’t find my own family tartan: The Wood family. Also, the majority of ordinary people in the Highland Clans didn’t have tartan designed kilts. Their kilts were woven from basic sheep’s wool, just like a big woollen blanket wrapped around them. Some people actually called them the Hawden Grey.

    • @cornstar1253
      @cornstar1253 Год назад

      Another from the Wood clan here. I think that there is a Wood tartan.

    • @cartoonraccoon2078
      @cartoonraccoon2078 Год назад

      You mean every clan didn't have one of those three ring binders of "clan tartans" to check if a pattern was in use before they made a new one?

    • @lynb2039
      @lynb2039 Год назад +2

      Clan Bell lass here. One of our weaves is only Black and White (wool from Black and White sheep). It's called the "Southern Bell" or "Bell South" tartan. Original clan, tartan weaves were generally not brightly colored; perhaps a bit of red,, blue, or green here and there. Reasons are many, but namely, Scotland being an jsland nation, not connected to mainland Europe, with a history that includes enforced trade restrictions by England. Furthermore, hand dyeing was arduous, and sourcing and gathering enough natural materials, such as berries, to create a dye bath resulted in most people owning and wearing a single kilt of muted or natural colors.for life. England's expansionism, by force, or by mutually beneficial trade negotiations, generated imports from India, Africa, France, and many other nations. Side note: The long and tumultuous history
      of Indigo,, the "gold stamdard" for creating BLUE dye, is an ancient tradition, carried on for generations in primarily three African nations, where the bushes grow, as well as INDIA, hence the name. A German immigrant and a tailor who sewed tents and wagon covers, became partners, ultimately creating the most universally recognized and iconographic piece of dyed clothing for the last 200 years: blue jeans. And though Scottish tartan has a far longer, more colorful, and meaningful, history of identifying family clans and national pride, the influence of blue jeans has even extended to blue jean kilts as a fashion statement.
      I LOVE THE SCOTTISH PEOPLE AND MY HERITAGE. Alba go bragh and thank you for your wonderful videos. P.s. your video about slavery and architecture in Scotland was a true eye opener. You might take a peek on Google and see how indigo has its place in Scottish history and the dyeing of tartan wool.
      Lyn from NY

    • @johnfisk811
      @johnfisk811 Год назад

      @@lynb2039 Surely woad was the original historical blue dye in Britain?
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Anthem_of_the_Ancient_Britons#:~:text=%22National%20Anthem%20of%20the%20Ancient,%26%20Son%20Ltd%2C%201921).

  • @Crusty_Camper
    @Crusty_Camper 2 года назад +13

    Brilliant video Bruce. I'm English with some DNA from the Glasgow area , so the tests say. I haven't found the genealogical link yet, but I am keen to do so. I only knew two definite things about the Kilt before watching this video. ! That is was completely banned after 1845 and 2. that the rules are very complicated. In the first couple of minutes, I discovered I knew NOTHING about the kilt. But you soon filled me in. That's the kind of video I like, and even the advert was relevant and interesting. Now I want a real kilt....

  • @jasoncreamer5747
    @jasoncreamer5747 2 года назад +57

    You know I never had interest in my Scottish heritage because I grew up in South Africa and it had no relevance to me. Your videos are extremely interesting though and I find myself watching them start to finish. I wish I wasn't so dismissive to my uncles back home when they were expressing their love and interest for Scotland and their heritage.

    • @jacquiewilson6796
      @jacquiewilson6796 2 года назад +3

      Scottish-born, I cried when I heard the pipe band at the opening of Parliament in Cape Town (mid-80s)

  • @allienegunn108
    @allienegunn108 Год назад

    I love your pace. It's not only delightful to listen to your video, but relaxing too.

  • @steelstanding8005
    @steelstanding8005 2 года назад +35

    The word Kilt is Norse, it is used to this day in Norway and Denmark, it means "wedged" From the great kilt being locked in to place by wedging it under a leather belt somehow. It is believed that the last Viking King of Norway used one, he was called Magnus Barefeet for that. Was even killed in Scotland.

    • @pavelstaravoitau7106
      @pavelstaravoitau7106 Год назад +4

      The Scottish kilt is an evolution of the Irish mantle, as the highland Scots were, until the later 16th century, virtually identical to the Irish in culture. In the late 16th century, they were noted to put their belts on top of their mantles instead of under, and hence starts the story of the great kilt.

    • @cooldaddy2877
      @cooldaddy2877 Год назад +3

      The kilt is an adaptation of the Irish/Gaelic brat aka the mantle. The Scottish Highlander wore the léine, Brat and Ionar before the had to adapt to the Féileadh Mór.

    • @Ryan_Dye-r
      @Ryan_Dye-r Год назад +1

      That makes sense. There appears to be a lot of Norse influence on the ancient Scots.

    • @cooldaddy2877
      @cooldaddy2877 Год назад +1

      @@Ryan_Dye-r Not true. Also Magnus Barefoot wore a tunic/Léine.

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Год назад

      ​@@pavelstaravoitau7106mantle is German for coat shelter covering.

  • @JannaGiles206
    @JannaGiles206 2 года назад

    Really interesting and you have a wonderful voice to top it off! Thank you!

  • @georgejames8718
    @georgejames8718 2 года назад +12

    My first kilt was, as you state, from one of those ‘stack ‘em high/sell ‘em cheap’ places of the Royal Mile in Edinburg. My second kilt is a bespoke. I wear it proudly. The quality of the bespoke is certainly top notch. When my Celtic band, The Jacobites By Name (check us out online!) plays, we all wear kilts.

  • @nickthenoodle9206
    @nickthenoodle9206 2 года назад +1

    If I ever go back to Scotland, I want this guy as my tour guide.

  • @gozer87
    @gozer87 2 года назад +7

    Great video. I am an occasional kilt wearer, mostly Renaissance faires and conventions or highland games. It's good to remember that the so called rules come mostly after the kilt fell from daily use.

  • @irishknitter17
    @irishknitter17 Год назад

    That’s so cool 😎 my grandson has a kilt. He got it in high school and wore it proudly.

  • @stuartbrown5999
    @stuartbrown5999 2 года назад +6

    I've worn my kilt in The US and while working in Erbil and Baghdad and the first thing asked is always about any underware, followed by what tartan it is and if its my Clan. I must admit that it is a great way to distinguish yourself from others and usualy leads to a fare few free drams and plenty of photo oppertunities!!

  • @firbolg
    @firbolg 2 года назад +7

    I just discovered your channel and already love it! Thank you so much for this. Discovered recently that on my Swiss (mother) side of the family we have Scottish and Irish ancestry. I have regrettably never been to Scotland but some years ago I visited Ireland and I felt there more at home than anywhere else I lived before. Once my current predicament is resolved, I intend to travel to Scotland, hopefully on two wheels.

  • @exexpat11
    @exexpat11 2 года назад +7

    Ah, very good content. Another reason for more, heavier material is that it seldom rises in the wind and is warmer much like the original blanket styled kilt.

  • @dawor1761
    @dawor1761 2 года назад

    Really cool. Thanks. I have a good quality Kilt and proud of it. My family heritage.

  • @aileenlee7106
    @aileenlee7106 2 года назад +4

    This is interesting. I started making my own little kilts for all the kids in my family because I couldn't wear a wool and the tartans from our clans are so hard to find. But they turned out really cute and we just have fun at the Scottish games every year dancing, eating and watching the games. Thanks for the video 😀

  • @raydriver7300
    @raydriver7300 Год назад

    Great video as always, Bruce. Keep up the good work 🌞

  • @AntoekneeDE
    @AntoekneeDE 2 года назад +4

    Thanks yet again, not really one to care for fashion but this was really interesting and tells much more a story of culture and class that shaped not just Scotland but also the wider Isles

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 9 месяцев назад

    I'm just seeing this a year after it was posted, but your videos are timeless Bruce! I loved learning about how kilts are made and I have actually used that technique of reversing a pleat to hide a part that was showing wear. As long as you match up the lines of color in the plaid, it works very well. I've also used the extra fabric to let out the waistline or take it in over the years but that's a bit more complicated since it has to be spread out over several pleats.

  • @brentwallace7096
    @brentwallace7096 2 года назад +7

    very informative video, Bruce. thank you. when I was visiting Scotland in my youth, I resisted the urge/temptation to purchase a kilt. also, being a US Army GI, my budget wasn't allowing for such a purchase. again, thank you for another great and informative video.

  • @aliceclearmanphd984
    @aliceclearmanphd984 Год назад

    I could follow this lad around all day just to listen to his marvelous way of speaking. And the information! Wow!
    Subscribed. 💗

  • @gideonsgate9133
    @gideonsgate9133 2 года назад +3

    This is amazing! I'm not Scottish but I love this video. Free the kilt!!!

  • @Juezma52
    @Juezma52 Год назад

    Love your videos and your sense of humor.

  • @TheAdventuringFoodie
    @TheAdventuringFoodie 2 года назад +3

    Great video, as always. I purchased my first kilt from Chisholm’s in Inverness, another small, family run, shop. I have been very satisfied with the quality!

  • @Chris-cleans
    @Chris-cleans 2 года назад +1

    Great video. I'm Asian-American. I have been interested in kilts for a long time now. I recently purchased a sport kilt because I didn't know what or how to search for one. I kind of wish I saw this before I bought one, but I'm still going to try out the sport kilt when it arrives. Thanks!

  • @ALaughingMan
    @ALaughingMan 2 года назад +3

    Gosh Im glad I found this channel. It teaches me about my heritage.
    I am doing my family history so I might be able to get a pedigree from my Clan, being three generations removed and the first of two to discover our heritage.
    My great great grandfather hailed from Scotland, before emigrating to New Zealand, and was a Maitland. As my grandmother's maiden name was.

  • @lauraholland347
    @lauraholland347 Год назад

    Really interesting about the box pleats- and easy remodelling.

  • @marksadventures3889
    @marksadventures3889 2 года назад +3

    I'm the owner of a few kilts, 2 are off the peg Royal Mile jobbies, one is my regimental Black Watch 3rd Scots and another from my wedding I had made by an aunt on Lewis. I wear my kilts with oride, yes even the knock offs, it's the symbolism that is more important for me. Giving the finger to the English establishment in clothing. Good video Bruce.

  • @inkhands
    @inkhands Год назад +1

    This was fascinating, thank you!

  • @straycat1674
    @straycat1674 2 года назад +18

    A lot of people don’t realize there is an actual kilting community. People that wear the kilt as every day wear. The kilt itself is quickly becoming not just a symbol of Scotland, but a of Celtic/Gaelic heritage and culture. It’s growing and evolving at and incredible pace. And those of us that do where the kilt quite often simply say, you do you. But there are certain rules. Pleats in the back, and if you wanna wear it at true waist or your hips, it should fall about mid knee for males. And be careful mixing brown and black leathers. Last one if you were in a clan tartan that is not yours, no worries. But don’t claim to be part of a clan that you have no affiliation to. Other than that just be respectful and sport it with pride.

    • @lyndavonkanel8603
      @lyndavonkanel8603 Год назад +1

      Oh, you answered my question about wearing a tartan that is not mine. Thanks! I want to wear one but finding our my clan(s) is probably impossible or close to it. Now I think it's safe to choose a color and pattern without offending.

    • @pavelstaravoitau7106
      @pavelstaravoitau7106 Год назад

      @@lyndavonkanel8603 that's how it's been done in history, wear whatever colours you like and can afford. Or the ones you're legally allowed, as in Early Medieval Irish laws (which also applied to parts of Scotland that the Irish took over) various social classes were only allowed certain colours and colour combinations.

    • @lyndavonkanel8603
      @lyndavonkanel8603 Год назад

      @@pavelstaravoitau7106 Thank you for you input and kind advice! My favorite color combination is green and blue so I'll get a tartan. If only a sash, in those colors.

  • @Skycastle
    @Skycastle Год назад

    @Scotland History Tours.
    Sometimes you just randomly stumbles upon a really good and interesting video and this is one of those videos for me. The visual presentation and your way of behaving on screen is really good and i could just sit back and learn. I had to stop at 3.52 to write this. Keep making videos and have a wonderful day

  • @davidmacgregor5193
    @davidmacgregor5193 2 года назад +5

    Hello Bruce, in the early 1960's I stayed in Cardow, Morayshire. Every Sunday I would attend Knockando church on three occasions, 10:00 for the morning service, 13:00 for Sunday school and 18:00 for the evening service. The kilt was my Sunday wear and I always wore mine when I went to the church, unfortunately for me photos of me in my kilt have survived over the sixty -odd years since they were taken.

  • @critically.panned
    @critically.panned 5 месяцев назад

    Came from Max’s video and I’m certainly glad I did!

  • @graceygrumble
    @graceygrumble 2 года назад +17

    There is a lot of ridiculous snobbery involved in kilt-wearing, on the one hand and there are some folks who see it as 'fancy dress' on the other hand and never give a thought to quality. It is a tricky road to venture down.
    Marion seems like the lass to help you navigate.
    Great stuff!

    • @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo
      @Herr_Flick_of_ze_Gestapo 2 года назад +1

      I consider all kilt wearers as cosplayers who watched Braveheart too often

  • @tytn9978
    @tytn9978 Год назад

    Thank You for including those beautiful scenes of Scotland's landscape! As for the kilt, I did get a "list" of what to do and what NOT TO DO. Though I did wonder who would have the courage of checking if I obeyed the undergarment rule!