I think the MacLeod edges the Buchanan.
Mind you, the MacLeod would be great for highway workers who want visibility.
I think the MacLeod edges the Buchanan.
Mind you, the MacLeod would be great for highway workers who want visibility.
OK, now that I know this exists… I must have it.
How dare you. (It is bright, I’ll grant you.)
Quoted for truth. If you can find an ancestral name and want to get a related tartan, more power to you. But just picking one that brings out your eyes is fine.
If you have a semikhah, you could wear the rabbinical tartan. Otherwise, you can choose the Jewish tartan or the Jewish Community tartan. There’s an interesting note at the link for the Jewish tartan:
Registration notes: A tartan, not only for the Jewish population in Scotland, but for Jews and non Jews anywhere in the world.
There’s the story of the fellow who goes into the tartan store, says to the clerk, “I’d like to buy a kilt in the tartan of my clan, but I don’t know what clan I’m from…”
The clerk replies in a strong Scottish accent “Aye, then wha’s yer last name?”
The customer replies “It’s Firestone.”
The clerk, “Och. That’d be the clan MacIntyre.”
Customer: “Really? How do you know?”
The clerk replies, “Och, laddie. Firestone’s bin MacIntyres for years.”
Thanks for the link.
Maybe 30 years ago, for some reason, my family got me a book that was mostly about showing different tartan patterns and associating them with family names. (We are largely Scottish by ancestry.)
Visiting Scotland in the mid 1990s, they did one better: At a tourist shop they were selling transparent key rings with actual tartan cloth samples in them, supposedly the correct one for your family name. I bought mine, which was mostly red with white and black stripes. In the center, over the cloth, is a badge with the family logo (a unicorn).
Not sure if any of this is correct, but it is kind of cool and fun.
My late wife was Irish, and one time we went to a Scottish festival in Chicago and was talking with someone there about tartans. If I’m remembering correctly, we were told that her Irish ancestors did have a tartan related to one of the Scottish clans.
We were also told that if she chose to wear the tartan, it meant that she was required to support the clan if it went to war.
He thought about it for a moment, and said, “Buchanan?”
Reminds me of Halloween.
Lucky for me I really like the tartan of my Scottish ancestors. I don’t see how I will ever have the need to wear a kilt but Pendleton had a dress shirt a few years ago with the pattern which I wear on occasion.
A kilt would be overdoing it in my family, but… I do have scarves in both the red and green versions, a tie in the more usual red, and (a piece of whimsy in the lockdown) a facemask in the red
Here’s the register of tartans:
The Scottish Register of TartansTry their FAQ for how to find the right sort of tartan ( you don’t necessarily need to splash out on a kilt, you could get a scarf or a tie)
Or maybe go with the personal tartan of professional wrestler Rowdy Roddy Piper.
Or if you’re a fan of 3M products (makers of Scotch Tape).
That databases seems really thorough.
A friend of mine is . . . extremely enthusiastic about his Scottish heritage.
Ask him if his online handle is by any chance “@Northern_Piper”.
That databases seems really thorough
It’s an official Scottish Government operation.
If nothing else, one could do like the original London Scottish Regiment and wear Hodden, a plain gray fabric used by hunters.
as any good german/scott might think now: I wear my Hoden in my Hodden.
(Hoden = german for testicles)