The black, red, gray and pink design honors the thousands of individuals—mostly women—who were persecuted under the Scottish ...
Thousands of people were executed under the Witchcraft Act in newly Protestant Scotland between 1563 and 1736. The law condemned […] ...
A bright red “Yale Divest From War” pin cuts through the noise ... Vivienne Westwood’s use of tartan –– or plaid as we Americans call it –– a checkered pattern often using reds, blues and greens, goes ...
Deck the halls with yards of tartan. Is there anything more festive than a Christmas tree covered in deep red and green tartan bows? Or a navy, green, and black tartan table cloth setting the ...
There are many different tartan designs representing different clans and names; there is a pattern for most Scottish names as well as my own. Red, green, blue and yellow tartans are the most common.
Every detail of Campbell’s Witches of Scotland tartan relates to some aspect of the witchcraft trials. “The red represents the women’s blood, the grey the ashes left when they were burned, and the ...
Tartan in its many forms – from cheerful, traditional red checks to punk-esque, acid blue-tinged patterns – has been all over social media this month, with the list of stylists, content ...