Argyll jacket
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(photograph by Allan Warren, 1984)
Argyll Highland jacket is a shorter than regular jacket with gauntlet cuffs and pocket flaps and front cutaway for wearing with a sporran and kilt. It can be of tweed, tartan or solid colour material. The Argyll is the standard day wear jacket. :[1][2]
Other jackets of the same cutaway for the sporran and kilt are known by other names, such as Crail, and Braemar; however, are generally often just referred to as an Argyll jacket.
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Fitzroy Donald Maclean in tartan Argyll jacket.
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Black Barathea Silver Button Argyll (BBSBA) jacket, worn with a five button vest and long tie for day wear. Suitable for evening wear with a three button vest and bow tie.
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Gavin Campbell wearing a Crail jacket. "The Queen's Lord Steward". Caricature by Spy published in Vanity Fair in 1894.
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Malcolm Macdonald wearing Argyll jacket
References
- ↑ "So that's how to wear your kilt". The Scotsman.
- ↑ "What to Wear?". Scottish Tartan Authority.