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Anyhoo,
USA Kilts just released a "Nordic Heritage" tartan. It's a modern fashion tartan that (in my opinion) looks great. The interesting thing about it is the spacing of the white and yellow lines. In this particular arrangement, it appears that the sett size is quite large - Those two lines effectively double the sett size. If my visual math is correct?
I'm wondering how one would pleat this if pleating to the stripe.
https://www.usakilts.com/kilts-and-p...-heritage.html
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 Originally Posted by Silmakhor
The interesting thing about it is the spacing of the white and yellow lines. In this particular arrangement, it appears that the sett size is quite large - Those two lines effectively double the sett size. If my visual math is correct?
I'm wondering how one would pleat this if pleating to the stripe.
My first thought would be that it's not too different, in terms of sett logistics, as the Stewart Hunting tartan used in military kilts. It has alternating yellow and red stripes which make the sett huge. But in practical terms, for pleating in military kilts, it is (or was) pleated to each of these lines so that they alternate. The pleats are presented as red, yellow, red, yellow, and so on. I suppose you could do the same with the tartan you're looking at.
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to Tobus For This Useful Post:
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 Originally Posted by Tobus
My first thought would be that it's not too different, in terms of sett logistics, as the Stewart Hunting tartan used in military kilts. It has alternating yellow and red stripes which make the sett huge. But in practical terms, for pleating in military kilts, it is (or was) pleated to each of these lines so that they alternate. The pleats are presented as red, yellow, red, yellow, and so on. I suppose you could do the same with the tartan you're looking at.
That's pretty much exactly what I was thinking.
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 Originally Posted by Tobus
My first thought would be that it's not too different, in terms of sett logistics, as the Stewart Hunting tartan used in military kilts. It has alternating yellow and red stripes which make the sett huge. But in practical terms, for pleating in military kilts, it is (or was) pleated to each of these lines so that they alternate. The pleats are presented as red, yellow, red, yellow, and so on. I suppose you could do the same with the tartan you're looking at.
It's not the alternating red and yellow stripes that make the sett big, it's the fact that it's asymmetric. A symmetrical setting with those stripes as pivots would be half the size.
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 Originally Posted by figheadair
It's not the alternating red and yellow stripes that make the sett big, it's the fact that it's asymmetric. A symmetrical setting with those stripes as pivots would be half the size.
Just checking my understanding here - the current "pivot" is the blue line surrounded by the dull red and black lines? And, the tartan is asymmetric because there isn't another clear pivot?
To put it another way, this tartan would be symmetric if both of the bright lines were white?
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