Pattern RRGYRRYRYYBGYYYYYGBYYRRGRRYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYRRGRRYGYYYGYGYBYBYGYRRY

RRGYRRYRYYBGYYYYYGBYYRRGRRYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYRRGRRYGYYYGYGYBYBYGYRRY

It is a 66 stripes tartan.

Colour Sequence

RRGYRRYRYYBGYYYYYGBYYRRGRRYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYGYRRGRRYGYYYGYGYBYBYGYRRY

List of tartans with this colour sequence

Tartans
Hunter Portrait/Artefact Tartan Tartan Number: 5873. Earliest known date: 1775 Presented to the Tartans Authority in Canada in 2003 by a Jean Hunter from Huntsville Ontario who had been given it by her Father the Rev. George W. Hunter - a minister in Aberdeen. The piece is a shawl 6ft 6inches long by 19inches wide and is what is known as a hard, superfine tartan using typical Wilson of Bannockburn colours. The sett is selvedge to selvedge full repeat and the weave is 52epi. The sett is complex with 8 colours and 67 colour changes. Embroidered into the end of the shawl is "Donnald 1775" See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015
Hunter Portrait/Artefact Tartan Tartan Number: 5873. Earliest known date: 1775 Presented to the Tartans Authority in Canada in 2003 by a Jean Hunter from Huntsville Ontario who had been given it by her Father the Rev. George W. Hunter - a minister in Aberdeen. The piece is a shawl 6ft 6inches long by 19inches wide and is what is known as a hard, superfine tartan using typical Wilson of Bannockburn colours. The sett is selvedge to selvedge full repeat and the weave is 52epi. The sett is complex with 8 colours and 67 colour changes. Embroidered into the end of the shawl is "Donnald 1775" See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 example sett
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