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21st November 05, 02:11 PM
#1
I will always wear a sporran. It finishes the kilt nicely and is a handy holder for keys and such. Even with a sport kilt! Not wearing one, to me, would be like wearing trousers all day with the zipper down.
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21st November 05, 02:15 PM
#2
I agree with most folks, a trad kilt should have a sporran in front of it, unless you are drumming or tossing the caber....i.e.- Highland gaming. Working kilts with pockets are a different matter.
Outside of purely aesthetic reasons, where else would you put your car keys?
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21st November 05, 02:21 PM
#3
Good question, when I'm at home I do not wear a sporran but have to have one on when leaving the house, after all it's supposed to be a pocket.
When I'm doing dirty work like maintanance on the car I leave off the sporran and put on a pig skin appron, keeps the kilt clean and protected.
Some of the historians on this board will tell you the highland regiments used to work without sporran.Nuff said.
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21st November 05, 02:49 PM
#4
I wear one 99.9% of the time. I have a plain, simple one for work (a black and a brown), a couple of nicer sporrans for going out (RKilts and Freelander) and a formal one.
I like to wear my work sporran so that it slides on the strap (never a chain), then I can slide it to the side for working or running from women
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21st November 05, 02:57 PM
#5
I think a sporran looks more masculine than a plain kilt, if only because it proclaims without a doubt that, "This is a kilt, fer sure!"
Aside from that, now Eddie Murphy is singing in my head, "My... guy... wants... to... sporran all the time, sporran all the time, sporran all the ti-ime!"
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21st November 05, 05:41 PM
#6
 Originally Posted by Shay
I think a sporran looks more masculine than a plain kilt...
Not really... A sporran adds a nice look of scottish tradition, not masculinity. Do women pipers wearing a sporran look masculine?... not in my experience. Masculinity (and femininity for that matter) comes from the demeanor of the person.
...if only because it proclaims without a doubt that, "This is a kilt, fer sure!"
I don't know.... I've had the "nice skirt" comment just as often while wearing a sporran as without. Wearing one may be a bit of a confidence booster for those that feel they need it, but I really don't think a sporran proclaims anything.
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21st November 05, 05:52 PM
#7
Okay- it's just my opinion. I don't mean a kilt on it's own looks unmasculine. I'm just saying a woman probably wouldn't wear something hairy hanging over her (insert polite word here) and actually yes, I do think female pipers in sporrans look a little masculine, but I understand it's a uniform. The uniform was not designed for women.
That's why I said 'more' masculine. If you wear a PC kilt coat, it's formal, but it's more formal if it has buttons on the sleeves and cuffs, right?
And actually, I as thinking more along the lines of "This is a kilt" as opposed to a pair of shorts or something- if you see a guy in a kilt from a distance, you can't always tell if he's wearing shorts or not, but a guy in a sporran is 99.9% sure of being a kiltwearer.
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21st November 05, 02:17 PM
#8
Since the traditional styled kilts do not have pockets, a sporran is needed to carry your stuff. It also seems to complete the "look" for wearing the kilt.
But then I've got a Pittsburgh kilt with all the pockets, so I don't need a sporran with it, although I've also got the clip on sporran and side pouches is I need the extra capacity.
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
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12th January 06, 09:58 AM
#9
A what?
 Originally Posted by ByDand
I will always wear a sporran. It finishes the kilt nicely and is a handy holder for keys and such. Even with a sport kilt! Not wearing one, to me, would be like wearing trousers all day with the zipper down.
What are trousers, and what does a zipper do?
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12th January 06, 10:15 AM
#10
On my tradtional tartan kilts I always wear a sporran- even when just staying local ... on my Utilikilts I never wear a sporran.
Brian
"I find that a great part of the information I have was acquired by looking up something and finding something else on the way."
- Franklin P. Adams
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