Campbell of Breadalbane

This is one variant — a specific cloth: this exact thread count and colourway, with its own provenance below. It is one weaving of the sett (the scale-free proportion — the same cloth at any scale or shade), whose colour order is pattern BKBKBKYGYKBKB.

Part of the Campbell of Breadalbane tartan — the named design grouping this sett with its other cloths.

Sourced from logan-1831. It is a 13 stripe tartan.

Original link /posts/logans-scottish-gael/

Provenance

Campbell of Breadalbane: Logan's printed table listing, scanned
Logan, The Scottish Gaël (1831), vol. II p. 402 — page-scan crop (913,1814)–(1169,2238), (1181,1147)–(1436,1549)

James Logan recorded the Campbell of Breadalbane sett in 1831, on page 402 of the Table of Clan Tartans in The Scottish Gaël — the earliest systematic published collection of clan setts. Logan gives the stripe widths in eighths of an inch, measured across the cloth and reflected about each end (a half-sett):

2 blue · 1 black · 1 blue · 1 black · 1 blue · 7 black · ½ yellow · 11 green · ½ yellow · 7 black · 6 blue · 1 black · 1 blue

Rendered at 8 threads to the eighth-inch that is B/16 K8 B8 K8 B8 K56 Y4 G88 Y4 K56 B48 K8 B/8 — the eighths are the captured data, and the threadcount is derived from them at that stated factor. How many threads an eighth of cloth held depends on the weave's density, so the factor is a display calibration, not Logan's count; the sett's identity lives in the proportions, which the eighths record directly. Logan named his colours rather than dyeing to a standard, so the palette here is the Dictionary's modern reading of his names.

See Logan's Scottish Gaël for the full table and method.

Later records of the Campbell of Breadalbane name adjusted Logan's counts: Campbell of Breadalbane; Campbell of Breadalbane #2; Campbell of Breadalbane #3; Campbell of Breadalbane (Clan). Compare their thread counts with Logan's above.

Dataset — provenance for this record, inherited from the source manifest
source
Logan, The Scottish Gaël (1831)
data captured from
https://archive.org/details/scotishgalorcel02logagoog
data date
1831 (this record)
licence
Public domain

Capture chain — the hands this data passed through, oldest first; each capture carries its own licence

  1. James Logan, The Scottish Gaël (first edition) 1831 · Public domain
    the printed Table of Clan Tartans, vol. II pp. 401-408, plus the Duke of Sussex plate
  2. Internet Archive scan
    the digitised first edition the transcription was made from, cross-checked against the OCR
  3. Tartan Dictionary transcription — Logan's Scottish Gaël 2026-06 · CC BY-SA 4.0
    by-eye transcription of the Table of Clan Tartans and the Duke of Sussex plate — depths in eighths of an inch, rendered at 8 threads per eighth (a display calibration anchored by the Register's Abercrombie ×8 stripe-for-stripe match); method and match report in the linked post
  4. this dictionary
    each re-capture is a git commit to data/sources

Thread count

DB/16 K8 DB8 K8 DB8 K56 LY4 G88 LY4 K56 DB48 K8 DB/8

One full sett is 616 threads.

Sett

Palette

ColourShadeOKLCh
DB#082077 #082077oklch(30.0% 0.149 265.1)
G#008B2A #008B2Aoklch(55.4% 0.170 145.9)
K#000000 #000000oklch(0.0% 0.000 0.0)
LY#DCBC32 #DCBC32oklch(80.0% 0.150 95.2)

Sample pattern

DB/16 K8 DB8 K8 DB8 K56 LY4 G88 LY4 K56 DB48 K8 DB/8 tartan

Compared to the master

This cloth is one sett of its design; the master sett (the exemplar the design is anchored on) is below for comparison.

Its ΔTartan distance from the master is 0.68 — the same measure the nearest-tartans table ranks by (0 is identical; a re-scale of the same cloth is near 0, a recolour or a different proportion further).

this sett (top) woven against the master sett (bottom) this sett master sett ★
One weave of this sett against the master sett ★, split on the diagonal: a shared proportion runs seamlessly across it with only the shades shifting; a different proportion breaks on it.

Nearest tartan variants

The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance, with this cloth at the top so the swatches line up against it.

Neighbour map

Every grey dot is one of 13621 variants placed by the first two principal components of the ΔTartan feature space (42% of its variance). Red is this tartan; blue dots are its nearest — click one to open its page.

Black from Cumnock (Personal)Breadalbane FenciblesCampbell of Breadalbane (Military)Breadalbane FenciblesRiddoch (Name)RiddochHope-Vere/Weir #2Hebrides #10Riddoch Personal TartanFair Tradegroundcomplexity

ID: /variants/s13/db4k2db2k2db2k14ly1g22ly1k14db12k2db2~x4/

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