Hay
In pattern RGYGRGRGRGRKRY.
This was sourced from weddslist. It is a 14 stripes tartan.
Original link http://www.weddslist.com/cgi-bin/tartans/pg.pl?source=tinsel
Attestations
This cloth appears in 2 source records; the oldest owns this page.
Thread count
DR/12 DG8 LG4 DG72 DR4 DG4 DR4 DG24 DR96 DG8 DR4 K2 DR4 N/12

Palette
Each colour and its ΔE from the base-6 reference it is a variant of.
| Colour | Shade | Base | ΔE (OKLab) |
|---|---|---|---|
| DG | #11450D #11450D | G #006400 | 0.10 |
| DR | #AA0000 #AA0000 | R #C80000 | 0.06 |
| K | #000000 #000000 | K #000000 | 0.00 |
| LG | #AAAA00 #AAAA00 | Y #E8C000 | 0.11 |
| N | #AAAAAA #AAAAAA | Y #E8C000 | 0.19 |
Nearest tartans
The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance.
- MacDonald of Glencoe — ΔT 0.81
- MacDonald, of Glencoe — ΔT 0.89
- Hay — ΔT 0.96
- Crieff — ΔT 1.09
- Hay Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 1555. Earliest known date: 1842 The design comes from the Vestiarium Scoticum (1842). The authors, the Sobieski Stuart brothers, enjoyed a popular following among the Scottish gentry in the early Victorian era, and in the spirit of the times, added mystery, romance and some spurious historical documentation to the subject of tartan. Of the better known tartans, the book offers some minor variation, but in other cases it provides the only recorded version of many tartans in use today. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 1.12
- Munro (Clan) — ΔT 1.19
- Dalzell — ΔT 1.19
- Dalzell — ΔT 1.19
- Bruce - 1819 (New) — ΔT 1.20
- MacDonald of Glencoe #3 — ΔT 1.21
Neighbour map
Every grey dot is one of 15726 variants placed by the first two principal components of the ΔTartan feature space (44% of its variance). Red is this tartan; blue dots are its nearest — click one to open its page.
ID: /setts/s14/r12g8y4g72r4g4r4g24r96g8r4k2r4ya12-g11450d-k000000-raa0000-yaaaa00-yaaaaaaa/