Franklin Museum Unidentified 2
In pattern BRBRBRGR.
This was sourced from register-of-tartans. It is a 8 stripes tartan.
Original link https://www.tartanregister.gov.uk/tartanDetails.aspx?ref=4974
Thread count
DB/4 R20 DB80 R100 DB4 R100 G80 R/20

Palette
Each colour and its ΔE from the base-6 reference it is a variant of.
| Colour | Shade | Base | ΔE (OKLab) |
|---|---|---|---|
| DB | #202060 #202060 | B #2C4084 | 0.11 |
| G | #006818 #006818 | G #006400 | 0.02 |
| R | #C80000 #C80000 | R #C80000 | 0.00 |
Nearest tartans
The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance.
- MacKintosh — ΔT 0.81
- Lovat or Fraser — ΔT 0.86
- Lovat, or Fraser — ΔT 0.89
- Caledonian — ΔT 0.94
- MacKintosh — ΔT 0.94
- MacKintosh #2 — ΔT 0.94
- Maxwell Variant — ΔT 0.97
- Caledonian - 1819 (Fashion?) — ΔT 1.02
- Lovat or Fraser Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 400. Earliest known date: 1820 The Scottish Tartans Society archives contain several queries on this name. J. Scarlett lists this sett under Fraser (Frasers of Lovat) with the comment. "The pattern is reputed to have been woven by Wilson's c.1820." (STS archive). 18 year old Simon Fraser became 25th chief of the Frasers of Lovat in March 1995, on the death of his grandfather, Lord Lovat, the famous war veteran. (Scotsman 17 March 1995) See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 1.04
- MacKintosh D — ΔT 1.04
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/s8/r20g80r100b4r100b80r20b4-b202060-g006818-rc80000/