When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: mccalls kilt hire edinburgh scotland address

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Romanes & Paterson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanes_&_Paterson

    The unusual family name of Romanes seems to have earlier been spelled as Romains, a merchant family of longstanding in Edinburgh. In 1810 James Romanes is listed as a "merchant" on the north side of Drummond Street in Edinburgh's South Side. [2] In 1815 he moved to larger and more prominent premises at 88 South Bridge. [3]

  3. Thomas Rawlinson (industrialist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Rawlinson...

    In a letter published in Edinburgh Magazine for March 1785, but claimed by partisan sources as supposedley written some years earlier, in 1768, Ivan Baillie of Aberiachan, Esq., a known promoter of political union with England and to be anti-Highland, asserted that the new form of the kilt was the creation of Thomas Rawlinson, an entrepreneur ...

  4. Dress Act 1746 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dress_Act_1746

    The Dress Act 1746, also known as the Disclothing Act, was part of the Act of Proscription (19 Geo. 2.c. 39) which came into force on 1 August 1746 and made wearing "the Highland Dress" — including the kilt — by men and boys illegal in Scotland north of the Highland line running from Perth in the east to Dumbarton in the west. [1]

  5. The Really Terrible Orchestra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Really_Terrible_Orchestra

    In the foyer of the Canongate Kirk, an Edinburgh church and their regular venue, the orchestra sells CDs of their performances. In 2005 a documentary film about the RTO, The Really Terrible Orchestra, directed by Edward Brooke-Hitching, was selected for the 60th International Edinburgh Film Festival in 2006. It won the Baillie Gifford Award for ...

  6. Tartan Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartan_Day

    A few examples include: the tartan weaver and women's clothier Prickly Thistle, of Evanton and Edinburgh; [88] the Gin Bothy distillery in Glamis; [70] Harris Tweed Textiles on the Isle of Lewis; [89] the Johnnie Walker distillery (Kilmarnock / London); [78] Walker's Shortbread ; the Salmon Scotland trade association (Edinburgh); and Scotch ...

  7. Visit of George IV to Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visit_of_George_IV_to_Scotland

    George IV's visit to Scotland in 1822 was the first visit of a reigning monarch to Scotland in nearly two centuries, the last being by Charles II for his Scottish coronation in 1651. Government ministers had pressed the King to bring forward a proposed visit to Scotland, to divert him from diplomatic intrigue at the Congress of Verona.

  8. The Calders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Calders

    Apartments in variations of the neighbourhood's common design style, with Calder Crescent / Calder Grove in the foreground, seen from the Union Canal towpath. The Calders is a residential neighbourhood in Edinburgh, Scotland – not to be confused with the Calders of West Lothian aka West Calder, Mid Calder and East Calder, three separate villages.

  9. Multrees Walk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multrees_Walk

    Multrees Walk, Harvey Nichols and Edinburgh Bus Station were all designed by Edinburgh architects CDA. The bus station sits at a lower level from Multrees and is accessed by escalators from St Andrew Square, or by a ramped entrance from Elder Street.