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| Saffron brown wool |

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This beautiful wool fabric
was provided by the customer. If you have some nice
fabric, Pittsburgh Kilts can use your fabric to produce
a one-of-a-kind kilt for you.
Here is my neighbor, Jim, modeling the kilt, and demonstrating
the inherent strength of kilters by effortlessly carrying
around a small child. |
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| Desert MARPAT |

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Jim in his own desert
MARPAT kilt. Here, Jim is illustrating an even more
important point: chicks dig guys in kilts. |
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| Heavy faux-suede |

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When the snow flies, it's
nice to have a heavy-weight kilt to gird your loins.
This kilt is an "upholstery grade" faux suede.
David doesn't look at all cold in this picture, does
he? |
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| Forest MARPAT |

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When you visit the North
rim of the Grand Canyon in October, there are a few things
you are gonna need. Like a warm coat, and a good hat.
And your forest MARPAT kilt! Ron reports, "Loved
the under apron pocket today in the updrafts at the Grand
Canyon rim...put a heavy pocket knife in there and it
held things in place well enough I wasn't arrested."
'Nuf said! |
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| Two-tone black with red
flames |

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Add some fire to your dart
game--or whatever it is you do! This kilt is a simple
black cotton twill fabric on the outside. Inside the pleats,
it has red-on-black flames. There are a number of unique
fabrics available that would make a similar impact--from
chile peppers to neon flamingos! |
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| Desert MARPAT |

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About this picture John writes:
"It was taken on our way to Annual Training with
the Guard. We stopped to refresh ourselves in a beergarden
in Fredericksburg Texas. I appreciate the MARPAT now even
more, as one of my soldiers who left our unit to join
the Marines a year and a half ago was killed near Najaf
on July 5th, so I feel like I'm honoring him when I wear
it. Again, thanks for a great kilt." |
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