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6th September 18, 04:58 AM
#161
 Originally Posted by PatrickHughes123
FossilHunter, I meant a different shade of red. Slightly lighter red. This obviously won't be soon as I don't want to spend anymore money right now regardless of price.
Patrick, I have had a Royal Stewart kilt for some time now, my mother is a Stewart and the price of the cloth was a deal. I had Barb Tewksbury make it. My point is I rarely if ever wear that kilt with red hose I think the closest I've ever come to that is to wear diced hose with red and white or red and black. Personally I wear any other colour but red with it. For example something like this works wonderfully with the Royal Stewart, as would green or blue.

I find it is a great idea to take one of the secondary colours of a tartan and use that for hose colour etc.
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6th September 18, 05:06 AM
#162
 Originally Posted by PatrickHughes123
What about wearing it with brown Ghillie Brogues? See, I look at the brown ones and get the impression it's more informal than the black ones. I want to wear Ghillie Brogues with the shirt. I wouldn't wear buckle brogues, they're too formal. I was thinking something like brown brogues with red or blue hose.
I'm partial to brown brogues for daywear. I know that black is the more popular choice for Highland-style footwear, since it's more versatile for both daywear and evening dress. But brown leather, in my mind, has a much softer and casual effect while still looking smart. I don't own any brown ghillie brogues, and prefer just regular brogues.
If you're stuck on only wearing ghillie brogues, so be it, but keep in mind you can wear them without the laces going up the leg. Just swap them out for regular shoelaces, and it can dress down your footwear somewhat when needed.
I would mirror FossilHunter's opinion on red hose (no matter the hue) being a bit much with that bright Royal Stewart tartan. This is personal preference, of course, and it's the fun part of accessorising with a kilt. There's so much room for personal style or flair when it comes to mixing and matching colours of the non-kilt parts of your wardrobe! Blues and greens go well with your tartan, and shades of brown and khaki can be surprisingly pleasant too. Once you get away from white hose, it opens up a whole new world.
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6th September 18, 05:07 AM
#163
McMurdo
Yes, considering the tartan has some blue in it, I had an previous idea to that where I wore dark blue hose with Royal Stewart tartan flashes
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6th September 18, 05:13 AM
#164
 Originally Posted by Tobus
I'm partial to brown brogues for daywear. I know that black is the more popular choice for Highland-style footwear, since it's more versatile for both daywear and evening dress. But brown leather, in my mind, has a much softer and casual effect while still looking smart. I don't own any brown ghillie brogues, and prefer just regular brogues.
If you're stuck on only wearing ghillie brogues, so be it, but keep in mind you can wear them without the laces going up the leg. Just swap them out for regular shoelaces, and it can dress down your footwear somewhat when needed.
I would mirror FossilHunter's opinion on red hose (no matter the hue) being a bit much with that bright Royal Stewart tartan. This is personal preference, of course, and it's the fun part of accessorising with a kilt. There's so much room for personal style or flair when it comes to mixing and matching colours of the non-kilt parts of your wardrobe! Blues and greens go well with your tartan, and shades of brown and khaki can be surprisingly pleasant too. Once you get away from white hose, it opens up a whole new world.
Yes, I thought that to be the case. I'm not going to put normal laces in them, as I do not find that appealing. Would I be right in thinking that black ghillie brogues with the ghillie shirt would be the kilt equivalent of 'smart-casual'? I realize this look would be better with the brown ones but just wondering. Because I've been doing some thinking on this, and I believe that this would make a smart-casual look without breaking the developing tradition of the kilt, it would just be my own style and innovation while adhering to the developed tradition.
Personally, I believe the ghillie is a smart shirt and looks great when done correctly. I know the shirt is extremely informal and the black brogues are formal, so I imagine this would give off my desired look of smart-casual and romantic.
Last edited by PatrickHughes123; 6th September 18 at 05:17 AM.
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6th September 18, 05:55 AM
#165
 Originally Posted by PatrickHughes123
Would I be right in thinking that black ghillie brogues with the ghillie shirt would be the kilt equivalent of 'smart-casual'?
...
Personally, I believe the ghillie is a smart shirt and looks great when done correctly. I know the shirt is extremely informal and the black brogues are formal, so I imagine this would give off my desired look of smart-casual and romantic.
To be honest, when I think of "smart-casual", the ghillie shirt doesn't even enter into the equation. Everyone has their own idea of what constitutes a "smart" (or its equivalent "sharp" in the USA) look. For myself, I don't see how a shirt could be smart at all when it can't be buttoned up and worn with a tie. As you said, that shirt is extremely informal. It's meant to look outdoorsy, quaint, and folksy. It's designed to be worn with the laces loose, and open at the neck. Lacing it up and tying it closed still wouldn't come close to the smart look of a traditional collared button-up shirt with overlapping seams at the buttons.
Mixing the folksy ghillie shirt with other items that may have a dressy appearance doesn't really up-scale the whole outfit. It just becomes an odd pairing of different levels of dress. Neither fish nor fowl, or perhaps fish and fowl fighting with each other.
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6th September 18, 06:17 AM
#166
 Originally Posted by Tobus
To be honest, when I think of "smart-casual", the ghillie shirt doesn't even enter into the equation. Everyone has their own idea of what constitutes a "smart" (or its equivalent "sharp" in the USA) look. For myself, I don't see how a shirt could be smart at all when it can't be buttoned up and worn with a tie. As you said, that shirt is extremely informal. It's meant to look outdoorsy, quaint, and folksy. It's designed to be worn with the laces loose, and open at the neck. Lacing it up and tying it closed still wouldn't come close to the smart look of a traditional collared button-up shirt with overlapping seams at the buttons.
Mixing the folksy ghillie shirt with other items that may have a dressy appearance doesn't really up-scale the whole outfit. It just becomes an odd pairing of different levels of dress. Neither fish nor fowl, or perhaps fish and fowl fighting with each other.
Well I see it as wearing a Saxon suit with a t-shirt or a shirt with the top button undone, that's smart-casual when it comes to suits. In Highland Dress, I believe smart-casual would be Ghillie Brogues with the Ghillie Shirt for very informal events such as social events, sports matches, parties/family-get-togethers, pub sessions, birthday parties, etc. I personally would wear this to Highland Games, which I will do the next time I get a chance to go to one. I believe I've found something that will work.
I've outlined, in my view, the perfect smart-casual-romantic Highland Dress outfit, taken from advice on the forum;
(1) - Optional head wear, Glengarry or Balmoral.
(2) - Ghillie Shirt.
(3) - Kilt with day sporran or hunting sporran, either black or brown.
(4) - Coloured hose with flashes.
(5) - Sgian dubh.
(6) - Black or brown Ghillie Brogues, done to match the sporran.
No fly plaid. No feather plume.
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6th September 18, 06:32 AM
#167
 Originally Posted by PatrickHughes123
Well I see it as wearing a Saxon suit with a t-shirt or a shirt with the top button undone, that's smart-casual when it comes to suits.
Wearing a suit with a standard dress shirt unbuttoned (and no necktie) does seem to be a casual approach to smart dress, I agree. But there's an important element here. It's taking standard dress items and "down-dressing" them for a casual look. That is, to me, the definition of smart-casual. I would define it as a more casual way of wearing dress items.
But that's completely different than trying to "up-dress" casual items. A t-shirt with a suit may be popular these days in certain circles, but it comes off as a counter-culture look, not smart-casual. The mixing of a casual t-shirt with a dressy suit is a jab at traditional dress, not simply a relaxation of smart dress. Does that make sense?
And this is where I think the ghillie shirt fits in (or rather doesn't) with smart-casual. It is trying to "up-dress" a folksy style, and the context just doesn't fit. So it comes off looking like a jab at traditionally recognised forms of dress.
Again, if you have chosen this to be your personal style, that's your business. But the perception by others will likely not be that it's smart-casual.
I think everything else on your list could probably fit smart-casual. It's just the shirt choice that seems out of place.
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6th September 18, 06:58 AM
#168
 Originally Posted by Tobus
Wearing a suit with a standard dress shirt unbuttoned (and no necktie) does seem to be a casual approach to smart dress, I agree. But there's an important element here. It's taking standard dress items and "down-dressing" them for a casual look. That is, to me, the definition of smart-casual. I would define it as a more casual way of wearing dress items.
But that's completely different than trying to "up-dress" casual items. A t-shirt with a suit may be popular these days in certain circles, but it comes off as a counter-culture look, not smart-casual. The mixing of a casual t-shirt with a dressy suit is a jab at traditional dress, not simply a relaxation of smart dress. Does that make sense?
And this is where I think the ghillie shirt fits in (or rather doesn't) with smart-casual. It is trying to "up-dress" a folksy style, and the context just doesn't fit. So it comes off looking like a jab at traditionally recognised forms of dress.
Again, if you have chosen this to be your personal style, that's your business. But the perception by others will likely not be that it's smart-casual.
I think everything else on your list could probably fit smart-casual. It's just the shirt choice that seems out of place.
Yes, I understand what you're saying. But I believe this look which I consider to be smart-casual Highland Dress, is a great innovation which doesn't seem to break the conventions of the natural development of the kilt. Who knows, this could be the next stage in its development. Maybe in 50-100 years time, people will be wearing this outfit and it will be referred to as "Smart-casual Highland Dress" and it will co-existent with all the current levels/styles of kilt wear we have today.
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6th September 18, 07:23 AM
#169
Patrick,
Glen and I did this quite a while ago, and while it might not perfectly represent our individual styles now (after all one's personal style can grow and change) it does provide some sort of baseline as to the many ways you can wear the kilt for different levels of formality. This might help you in figuring out some basic guidelines. Take a look:
http://www.xmarksthescot.com/forum/f...-attire-46888/
The ghillie shirt would fall into the category of "festival wear" like the outfit I have with the pith helmet, being that in the right setting it is quite fun, but certainly not for most other occasions.
Cheers
Jamie
Last edited by Panache; 6th September 18 at 08:35 AM.
-See it there, a white plume
Over the battle - A diamond in the ash
Of the ultimate combustion-My panache
Edmond Rostand
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6th September 18, 07:37 AM
#170
 Originally Posted by PatrickHughes123
Who knows, this could be the next stage in its development. Maybe in 50-100 years time, people will be wearing this outfit and it will be referred to as "Smart-casual Highland Dress" and it will co-existent with all the current levels/styles of kilt wear we have today.
That's wishful thinking my friend.
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