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4th July 26, 05:24 PM
#11
 Originally Posted by geomick
My Gaelic Themes tweeds are 48R, so if it doesn't fit (but really is a 48R) we can talk at the Waukesha games
Absolutely. See you then.
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 Originally Posted by scratchy
Help my feeble color vision:
What 'kind' of green is it, i.e. lovat, Kelly, highland, bottle(not that I'd be able to tell the difference anyways)?
Hard for me to tell, I think it was "bottle" green.
EDIT:
I went back and looked at the original listing, and the semi-faraway shots of the whole jacket look much darker than the closeup shots of one cuff and of the label.
In the faraway shots it looks bottle green, while in the closeup shots it looks almost like what's sometimes called "Highland green".
Last edited by OC Richard; Yesterday at 04:36 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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The Following User Says 'Aye' to OC Richard For This Useful Post:
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We shall find out when it gets here sometime next week 
If the size or color doesn't work out, it's not account wreckingly expensive. Fingers crossed.
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 Originally Posted by OC Richard
Hard for me to tell, I think it was "bottle" green.
Ah, so I'm not the only one! Do most tweeds "change appearance" with the light? If it turns out to be Rolling Rock beer bottle green it may be a bit dark for my taste, but again we'll see.
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There's a lot of different greens with tweeds! And they end up getting called various things.
I'm trying to think of the ones I've seen.
Lovat Green: marled green and blue threads, a soft blue-ish green
Highland Green or Tartan Green: more or less the green seen in tartan
Moss: a light soft olive-tinged green
Feldgrau: I don't know what the Scottish makers call it, but it's not Lovat, not Moss, and exactly the colour that the German military calls Feldgrau
Bottle Green: a dark green like US 'forest green'
Archer Green: an extremely dark green that's often mistaken for black unless seen in strong light
Here, three of the doublets are Archer Green
Last edited by OC Richard; Yesterday at 04:58 PM.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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 Originally Posted by OC Richard
There's a lot of different greens with tweeds! And they end up getting called various things.
Archer Green: an extremely dark green that's often mistaken for black unless seen in strong light
Here, three of the doublets are Archer Green

I just checked. My electronics are pumping all the electrons they can muster to my monitor, yet I can't see the green. Certainly an endorsement for getting real fabric swatches before investing in a garment.
But I can't look at that photo without wondering just how LONG it takes those guys to dress for a performance! (Any guesses, or, better yet, informed answers?)
Having just acknowledged how important it is to check real FABRIC when selecting a tweed, I'll still drop a couple JPEGS here to solicit opinions regarding pairing one of these (from Lovat Mills), in an Argyll + lapelled waistcoat with a Glen Affric kilt:
Thanks SO MUCH!
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