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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
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Drummer
1st Bn Black Watch Aldershot 1913.
Wearing wings, pipers dirk, kilt pin, QVC belt clasp and regimental buttons. |
#2
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Great shot. I do not believe those are regimental buttons however, but are the standard OR pattern with the Royal Arms.
He appears to be quite a wee fellow! CB |
#3
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Hi CB, I've looked long and hard with an eyeglass at those buttons. At first I convinced myself, now I'm not so sure!
Ron. |
#4
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I can see "crown and inch" on the collar, but nowhere else. I would have expected it on sleeves and cuff ....... Is the garment perhaps not the equivalent of the scarlet tunic, but is a "second" garment, above the frock equivalent?
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#5
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The Royal Highlanders regimental button was engraved style with no border, not a raised design like these. Also, I note tape along the sleeve seam which is very dark, not the white background I would expect. I think old photography may be playing some tricks to our eyes here.
CB |
#6
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CB,
The tape on the sleeve could be where drummers lace has been removed? Ron. |
#7
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Quote:
The collar tape/ piping is as one would expect. In those distant days of full dress, it was not uncommon to have a second full-dress uniform, part-worn, available. Foot Guards bands had three! |
#8
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Those look to me like bandsmen’s wings as there is no fringe and I can see no crown and inch lace bands on arms or collar. Might this not be a bandsman who has been given an old drummers doublet, with the crown and inch lace removed from the sleeves and collar top, which has left a trace because of the different shades caused by fading. Removing the drummers piping at the base of the collar and skirt pocket flaps is more difficult (it would require the removal of the collar) and so it has been left.
Last edited by Toby Purcell; 16-06-19 at 10:45 AM. |
#9
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Could it be that over enthusiastic ironing has resulted in the "stripe" running down the sleeve?
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#10
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There wasn’t much ironing going on then, Leigh. 1913 was still the age before vertical creases were expected, ‘American style’, and at best men ‘pressed’ their uniforms between boards under their mattress overnight.
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#11
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Yes, I thought it unlikely given that photos of the time show uniform creasing more to the horizontal rather than the vertical (my father mentioned mattress board uniform pressing being employed in his day, the 1940's).
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