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- Newsgroups: alt.sewing
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- From: fred@cc.ysu.edu (Fred Ullom)
- Subject: Re: Family tartans
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.164717.7640@news.ysu.edu>
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- Organization: Youngstown State University
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- References: <1992Nov16.134342.28554@mintaka.lcs.mit.edu>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 16:47:17 GMT
- Lines: 48
-
- dmiller@theory.lcs.mit.edu (Dick and Jill Miller) writes:
- :
- : There was a fairly long discussion on soc.roots (the genealogy newsgroup) a
- : while back about 'family' tartans. Turns out that until recently there
- : were no family tartans. Each weaver made up what they liked. Then someone
- : in the British army which had several Scottish regiments decided that it
- : would look more coordianted if all the soldiers in a regiment wore the same
- : tartan as a uniform. The idea spread and thus was born the 'family'
- : tartan.
- :
- :
-
- Well, that's kinda right:-)
-
- There were as early as the 1600's tartans associated with extended families
- but since they usually populated a given area, they were worn by the people
- of the district which was governed by a certain family (clan). Weaver's
- designed them and generally made what they liked but they were governed by
- the choices of local fauna for dye stuffs so the choice of color was limited
- - also since the weaver always maximized their raw materials, the percentages
- of each color seems to be related to the abundance of a particular dyestuff
- to the area. Thus, if there were only a few
- crowberry's growing in the area, you would
- only find a small overcheck of crowberry purple in the tartan those weavers
- were weaving.
-
- Although the tartan association to families does indeed go back at least
- three centuries, it was only in the 1930's that the Lord Lyon Court in
- Edinburgh took on the responsibility of documenting and registering family
- tartans. Before then it was just tradition and heresay and many individuals
- chose to adopt any pattern they liked and call it their family tartan.
-
- The first military tartan was the Black Watch which was the Campbell Clan
- tartan. It was chosen by the king to be the uniform for the 42nd Highland
- regiment. There have been all kinds of romantic reasons as to why this pattern
- was chosen including the famous idea that the black, blue, and green provided
- a night camoflague for the troops. In actuality, its been
- postulated (J.D. Scarlett
- Tartan: A Highland Textile) that when the king was confronted with having to
- clothe 10,000 troops, he did as any prudent king would do, he bought the
- cheapest fabric that was available at the time:-)
- --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Fred S. Ullom
- Handweaver of tartan cloth and member of the House of Gordon
- tacon019@ysub.ysu.edu
- Youngstown State University
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-