GRGRGR
It is a 6 stripes tartan.

Colour Sequence
GRGRGR
List of tartans with this colour sequence
| Tartans |
|---|
| Confederate Artillery |
 |
| Erskine (Vestiarium Scoticum) |
 |
| MacQuarrie #5 |
 |
| Unidentified NW Highlands |
 |
| Erskine (Clan) |
 |
| MacQuarrie - 1886 (Clan) |
 |
| Confederate Artillery (Military) |
 |
| Erskine |
 |
| MacQuarrie |
 |
| Erskine |
 |
| Harmony, 11 |
 |
| Harmony, 12 |
 |
| MacQuarrie 7 |
 |
| Unidentified, NW Highlands |
 |
| Erskine |
 |
| MacQuarie |
 |
| Erskine |
 |
| MacQuarie |
 |
| Erskine (Green & Red) Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 891. Earliest known date: 1842 The Erskine clan or family originated in Renfrewshire. The first published version of the tartan appeared in the Vestiarium Scoticum, a romantic history of Scottish dress produced in 1842 by the Sobieski brothers. Cunningham tartan, published in the same work, differs only in the addition of a white stripe between the narrow green lines. Cunningham was one of the names adopted by the MacGregors, and this provides a tenuous connection which might explain the origin of the design. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 |
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| MacQuarrie Clan Tartan Tartan Number: 892. Earliest known date: 1886 J. Grant's version of the MacQuarrie tartan is the one used today and illustrated in Bain's pocketbook. The earliest reference to a related MacQuarrie sett appears in the Cockburn Collection (c.1815). D C Stewart says, "The MacQuarrie tartan now most often used is related to the red MacDonald...". MacQuarrie's were followers of the Lords of the Isles and held lands on the Isle of Mull. The chiefship today is vacant. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 |
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