Barclay, dress

In pattern WYKY.

This was sourced from weddslist. It is a 4 stripes tartan.

Original link http://www.weddslist.com/cgi-bin/tartans/pg.pl?source=sts

Thread count

LN/2 Y12 K12 Y/2 Sett

Palette

Each colour and its ΔE from the base-6 reference it is a variant of.

ColourShadeBaseΔE (OKLab)
K#000000 #000000K #0000000.00
LN#E0E0E0 #E0E0E0W #F4F4F00.06
Y#F0C000 #F0C000Y #E8C0000.01

Sample pattern

Tartan detail

Nearest tartans

The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance.

  1. Barclay Dress — ΔT 0.63
  2. Barclay Dress Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 1879. Earliest known date: 1906 Based on the earlier hunting sett which appeared in the Vestiarium Scoticum in 1842. Barclay's appear to have no 'regular' tartan. The dress version assumes this role and is the sett most commonly associated with the name. The Aberdeenshire Barclays of Tolly held lands for over 600 years, and their descendant, Michael Andreas Barclay, was made Prince Barclay de Tolly for his part in the defeat of Napoleon. There is also a green hunting version of the same pattern. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 0.65
  3. MacLeod Dress Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 1272. Earliest known date: 1829 See illustration in Bain where red is 4 threads. Sir Thomas Dick Lauder in a letter to Sir Walter Scott in 1829 wrote, MacLeod has got a sketch of this splendid tartan, "three black stryps upon ain yellow fylde," See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 0.73
  4. Barclay Dress — ΔT 0.84
  5. Barclay Dress — ΔT 0.86
  6. MacLeod #3 — ΔT 1.11
  7. MacLeod — ΔT 1.20
  8. Silvicola (Corporate) — ΔT 1.23
  9. Bonhill Primary School — ΔT 1.27
  10. Nooten-Boom (Personal) — ΔT 1.31

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.

Barclay DressBarclay Dress Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 1879. Earliest known date: 1906 Based on the earlier hunting sett which appeared in the Vestiarium Scoticum in 1842. Barclay's appear to have no 'regular' tartan. The dress version assumes this role and is the sett most commonly associated with the name. The Aberdeenshire Barclays of Tolly held lands for over 600 years, and their descendant, Michael Andreas Barclay, was made Prince Barclay de Tolly for his part in the defeat of Napoleon. There is also a green hunting version of the same pattern. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015MacLeod Dress Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 1272. Earliest known date: 1829 See illustration in Bain where red is 4 threads. Sir Thomas Dick Lauder in a letter to Sir Walter Scott in 1829 wrote, MacLeod has got a sketch of this splendid tartan, "three black stryps upon ain yellow fylde," See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015Barclay DressBarclay DressMacLeod #3MacLeodSilvicola (Corporate)Bonhill Primary SchoolNooten-Boom (Personal)

ID: /setts/s4/w2y12k12y2-k000000-we0e0e0-yf0c000/

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