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  1. #1
    Join Date
    10th December 09
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    Salt Lake City, UT
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    Quote Originally Posted by cajunscot View Post
    Woolrich, a supplier of outdoor kit since the 1830s, claims that the "Buffalo Check" shirt was introduced sometime in the late 1800s:

    http://www.woolrich.com/woolrich/company/aboutUs.jsp

    T.
    Quote Originally Posted by Pyper View Post
    In the USA, all tartans are plaid, but not all plaids are tartan. In almost every tartan, the warp and the weft are the same (so your tartan is the same vertical and horizontal). Many plaid fabrics do not have the same warp and weft.

    Take a look here for a bunch of plaid fabrics, most of which would not be mistaken for any tartan:
    http://www.thefabricfinder.com/PlaidFabrics.htm

    Here's one telling of the history of your flannel shirt:
    http://www.ehow.com/facts_5022110_hi...el-shirts.html
    Thanks for the links and history lesson! I guess it makes obvious sense that people coming from the UK to the US would bring their own styles of clothing with them, and it makes sense also that those styles might eventually become bastardized to a similar but entirely different style.

    I'm curious if there's any real difference of utility (thread count, textile, etc) or aesthetic which would separate "plaid" from tartan as well.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    3rd July 09
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    Canada
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    Quote Originally Posted by vegan_scot View Post
    Thanks for the links and history lesson! I guess it makes obvious sense that people coming from the UK to the US would bring their own styles of clothing with them, and it makes sense also that those styles might eventually become bastardized to a similar but entirely different style.

    I'm curious if there's any real difference of utility (thread count, textile, etc) or aesthetic which would separate "plaid" from tartan as well.
    While far from being an authority on fabrics, I do believe the only difference is defined by the dictionary, with Oxford vs Webster in the main bout for supremacy.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    6th November 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by vegan_scot View Post

    I'm curious if there's any real difference of utility (thread count, textile, etc) or aesthetic which would separate "plaid" from tartan as well.
    Here in the USA, most "plaid" fabric is cotton (woven or flannel). A lot is polyester too. The cotton plaids are frequently died patterns, not woven patterns. Synthetics don't generally take dye, so they'd need to be woven in.

    My mom was seriously into sewing, and I spent a lot of time in the fabric section while growing up.

    Another subset of plaid fabric is Madras, which is always lightweight cotton, and you would never mistake it for tartan .

    http://www.google.com/images?q=madras+fabric

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