The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tweed’s part of the fabric of Scotland’s sporting estates

New film celebrates importance of bespoke traditiona­l clothing to country’s gamekeeper­s and field sports fans

- GrahaM brown gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

The spectacula­r Angus glens have been the catwalk for a fashion shoot showcasing the importance of tweed for Scotland’s sporting estates beyond the internatio­nal runways where it remains in big demand.

Although bespoke tailoring is normally the preserve of Savile Row, local shooting estates are at the forefront of a fresh effort to promote the tweed industry after a new study revealed the sporting sector’s annual spend on the fabric is in excess of a quarter of a million pounds.

In the same way as clans have their own tartan, each shooting estate follows a tradition of having its own tweed, uniquely designed and reflecting the estate’s natural landscape.

Gamekeeper­s are measured up for a new set of estate tweeds every year and a film has been created by the Angus Glens and Grampian Moorland Groups to celebrate the proud tradition and focus on the contempora­ry master weavers and tailors who are clothing today’s working gamekeeper­s.

The Pace Production­s film, Tweed – Hill to Hill – A Rural Tradition, reveals how bespoke suits are made by firms including Campbell’s of Beauly, which works with more than 100 Scottish estates.

The tradition of estate tweed began in the early 1800s, when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert set a precedent by having a bespoke tweed designed for their staff at Balmoral.

The unique blend of colours, patterns and textures of an estate tweed reflects the natural make-up of its surroundin­gs and serves as a camouflage for gamekeeper­s and ghillies.

On the Invermark Estate in the Angus glens north of Edzell, the gamekeeper­s’ tweed is grey to reflect the natural rock and granite of the landscape, whilst the tweed worn by pheasant keepers on a lower ground estate will be a yellowy green to blend into the farmland environmen­t.

Invermark gamekeeper Callum Low said: “It is something that every gamekeeper is proud to wear as their uniform.

“Tweed is a working bit of gear to us, it’s a great fabric which is completely silent – a must when stalking – and although it’s not waterproof, it is very warm and as each suit is made-tomeasure, it is also extremely comfortabl­e.”

Lianne MacLennan of the Angus Glens and Grampian Moorland Groups, who has just finished working on the new film, said: “Field sports are a vital component supporting the local economy and the business estates generate for the tweed industry is paramount.”

 ??  ?? Invermark Estate gamekeeper­s Callum Low and Iain Robb proudly wearing the estate tweed.
Invermark Estate gamekeeper­s Callum Low and Iain Robb proudly wearing the estate tweed.
 ??  ?? Each shooting estate has its own tweed, uniquely designed and reflecting the estate’s natural landscape.
Each shooting estate has its own tweed, uniquely designed and reflecting the estate’s natural landscape.

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