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Sir Walter Scott’s Tartan Revival — 2 Comments

  1. https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/aboutUs

    Thank you, Janice, for another very interesting (and colourful) post. 🙂 The link above, I think, will help most of Scotiana’s readers find the information they seek on Scottish tartans. (The Irish have tartans too, but not so many!)

    Established in 2008 by an Act of the Scottish Parliament, the Scottish Register of Tartans is an authoritative source, and for me would be the first ‘port of call’.

    As you wrote, Janice, it was during the 19thC that the tartan of Highland dress somehow evolved to become a symbol or badge for all of Scotland, or at least for very large parts of it. The colourful tartan patterns themselves, the romance of Scottish history and even commercial factors, must all have been important. But above all, perhaps, the idea of wearing a Clan tartan, a design exclusive to one’s own family, is very appealing indeed!

    And so, over the years, the number of registered Scottish tartans has continued to grow. The traditional Clan tartans predominate, of course, but as recently as 2017 the Scottish airline, Loganair, added their design to the list. (Barr’s ‘Irn Bru’ tartan dates from 1996/1997, and the tartan of Glasgow Rangers FC from 1994.)

    Families and Clans from the southern Scottish Border have registered designs too, as the influence of tartan spread. (The Armstrongs in 1842, for example, the Elliots in 1880, and the Turnbulls just 50 years ago, in 1978.)

    On the subject of tartan, one immediately thinks of kilts – or should I say ‘the kilt’, for, in Scotland we always speak of a man ‘wearing the kilt’ (rather than ‘a kilt’) – and the traditional kilt is for men only. Ladies may wear a ‘kilted skirt’ in tartan (and a tall and pretty girl might choose a mini-kilt!) 🙂

    Whole books have appeared, advising men on how to ‘wear the kilt’ correctly. For me, the most important rule is that the length should be correct – the kilt should reach only to the middle of the kneecap, although just a little shorter is OK. (I also dislike when a man’s thick woollen stockings reach too high – he really ought, fearlessly, to show a little skin!) 🙂

    Iain.

  2. Dear Iain,

    Merci beaucoup for this thoughtful and informative addition to the conversation. Your note about the Scottish Register of Tartans being the first “port of call” is certainly helpful for readers who are searching for reliable information about their clan or family tartan.

    I also appreciated your reminder that the spread of tartan beyond the Highlands, into the Borders and throughout Scotland, was a gradual historical process. As you point out, the appeal of wearing a tartan associated with one’s own family or clan is powerful indeed.

    Your examples of more recent registrations show beautifully how tartan continues to evolve as a living tradition rather than simply a relic of the past.

    And thank you as well for the practical advice about wearing the kilt properly! I suspect many readers will now be checking the length of their kilts, and perhaps their stockings, before their next Burns Supper. 🙂

    Until next, all the very best,
    Janice

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