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  1. #1
    Join Date
    14th March 06
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    Suiting wool for kiltmaking?

    I am thinking of making a kilt in a solid color, but am having a hard time finding kilting wool in the color I need. I have a chance to buy some that is described as "soft and tightly woven suiting wool" that seems to weigh 12-13 ounces/yard.

    Anyone ever tried to make a kilt with suiting wool like this?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    3rd January 06
    Location
    Dorset, on the South coast of England
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    I have some which is a nasty Teflon finish on one side but is a respectable brown on the other. I will of course be working on it 'inside out' and hope that the nasty shiny slidy finish will just make for a really nice swish.

    I think it will make a decent midweight kilt, and it even has a good selvage edge so will not require hemming.

    The cloth is dense, fluid and I think it will look well enough.

    Now that I have a small (but good) number of wearable kilts I have been sidetracked into boring stuff like preparing to have new windows put in at the back of the house, so I have several sacks full of nearly done or potential kilts to be worked on when I have the time - so unfortunatly the suiting is only a kilt in potentia, as yet.

    If the cost is not high I would say go for it, wool of any kind seems well worth investigating as a likely candidate for a kilt.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    30th November 04
    Location
    Deansboro, NY
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    Kind of depends on the price, I think. The best wool for kilting is hard, not soft (holds a better crease) and twill weave rather than plain weave. If you can get it cheaply, of course, it doesn't matter. But, if you're going to pay a lot for it, you might want to invest instead in solid color fabric woven by a tartan mill.

    Cheers!

    Barb

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