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22nd September 24, 02:22 AM
#1
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to OC Richard For This Useful Post:
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23rd September 24, 02:33 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Oddly, the mannequin-displayed uniform of the Major of the 4th Battalion Seaforth Highlanders has the Sam Browne belt on back-to-front.
I noticed that - and not just back to front, but upside-down too..!
I wrote to the museum in the hope that they will correct the faux-pas.
But it beats me how anyone could have got something so fundamental that badly wrong.
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23rd September 24, 03:08 AM
#3
 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Is the bonnet a Mackie?
I'm not sure about the bonnet - and many of the earlier ones have no maker's label of markings.
The bonnet I usually wear is an old Lovat Scouts' dark blue with diced band, and the construction is interesting, as it is heavily reinforced with a tough hessian-like interlining. But no indication to date or manufacturer.
The hessian responds well to shaping and moulding when steamed (or dampened) so the bonnet can be formed to the wearer's desire, and so that the diced portion can be shaped to take on the contours of the head for a perfect all-round fit.
The hessian then holds its new form when cool and dry again (it must have somekind of paste or startch dressing) and so the felted outer follows suit. This also means the diced band remains straight and vertical, and is in no danger of curling in the way some do.
I also have a similarly constructed blue bonnet (never worn) of the same kind of age as the Lovat Scouts' one, but this is much shallower. It has the same hessian in the crown, and also running as a band about and inch and a half wide all the way around.
This has the same effect as the stiffened diced banding, but at about half the depth, so the bonnet wants to sit much higher on the head and somewhat flatter - so almost identical to the one one show at Strathnaver - which means attaching a bonnet-badge is very tricky if you want it to remain upright. It naturally wants to hang sideways under the crown, and so the diced band has the advantage here.
Both bonnets are lined in a strong, hard-wearing cotton drill.
The Mackie bonnets have a lovely, luxurious felt and silky lining, but a softer interlining, which seems to allow Mackie's to be steamed, soaked, shrunk and moulded nicely, but they lack the stiffness of the old ones.
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