Unnamed, No 52

In pattern BBBBBBWG.

This was sourced from weddslist. It is a 8 stripes tartan.

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

Thread count

B/32 DB4 B4 DB4 B4 DB24 LN2 G/38 Sett

Palette

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

ColourShadeBaseΔE (OKLab)
B#8080D0 #8080D0B #2C40840.24
DB#000050 #000050B #2C40840.20
G#008000 #008000G #0064000.09
LN#E0E0E0 #E0E0E0W #F4F4F00.06

Sample pattern

Tartan detail

Nearest tartans

The nearest existing variants by ΔTartan distance.

  1. Unidentified No 52 — ΔT 0.76
  2. Pitceathly Chamberlain (Personal) — ΔT 1.08
  3. Norwich No.052 — ΔT 1.11
  4. Keela (Corporate) — ΔT 1.14
  5. Lochaber District — ΔT 1.15
  6. Gorman Blue (Personal) — ΔT 1.22
  7. Dress Watch — ΔT 1.23
  8. Bannockbane Silver — ΔT 1.27
  9. MacOrrell Family Tartan Tartan Number: 672. Earliest known date: Date unknown The MacOrrell tartan has similarities with the MacDonald, Lord of the Isles sett, which may point a connection with the name MacDonnell or MacDonald. The name Orr was used by a sept of the MacGregors and also of the Campbells of Argyll, suggesting that the root of the name originated in the Lochaber and Argyll districts. There is an undated sample of the tartan in the cloth archive of the Scottish Tartans Society. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015 — ΔT 1.33
  10. MacOrrell — ΔT 1.34

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.

Unidentified No 52Pitceathly Chamberlain (Personal)Norwich No.052Keela (Corporate)Lochaber DistrictGorman Blue (Personal)Dress WatchBannockbane SilverMacOrrell Family Tartan Tartan Number: 672. Earliest known date: Date unknown The MacOrrell tartan has similarities with the MacDonald, Lord of the Isles sett, which may point a connection with the name MacDonnell or MacDonald. The name Orr was used by a sept of the MacGregors and also of the Campbells of Argyll, suggesting that the root of the name originated in the Lochaber and Argyll districts. There is an undated sample of the tartan in the cloth archive of the Scottish Tartans Society. See products available Copyright © Blair Urquhart, Comrie, 2015MacOrrell

ID: /setts/s8/g38w2b24ba4b4ba4b4ba32-b000050-ba8080d0-g008000-we0e0e0/

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