"description":"Created by Ralph Stevenson Jr and Charles Hargis in 2005 for the city's tricentennial anniversary (1706-2006). It is similar in design to the New Mexico tartan, with a little less green, and white instead of yellow, with a thicker center band."
},
"Armstrong":{
"sett":"G4 BK2 G60 BK24 B4 BK2 B2 BK2 B24 R6",
"description":""
},
"Arizona":{
"sett":"W2 G3 R4 G28 B3 BR8",
"description":"Based on a jpeg I found on a geocities homepage. Surprisingly, that jpeg was the only mention I could find on the net of what the actual sett was for Arizona."
"description":"Another asymmetrical sett: that's what the period at the end means. This is just a quick guess on my part. Makes me think of lumberjacks!"
"description":"Wikipedia lists the sett as [Y/6] R4 MB26 K32 G4 W4 Lv4 W4 [G/44]. I'm not familiar with the [Color/Count] notation, the count appears to be doubled, possibly to indicate the total count of that thread in the mirror section.\n\nColorado house joint resolution 97-1016 makes this official but doesnt provide a thread count. It speaks of \"cerulean blue\" which I approximate with the unique (669) color."
"description":"This thing apparently spells out \"debian\" in morse code. All I know is it's way too busy. But it's cool that they put a message in it. I wonder if I could make a UPC barcode..."
"description":"This isn't official but I think it's pretty. I just guessed at the sett pattern but I think I got pretty close. I believe this was designed and is exclusively sold by Kathy Lare, a kiltmaker formerly in Albuquerque."
"description":"Based on a terrible gif that appars to be a part of Nevada Revised Statute 235.130. Designed by Richard Zygmunt Pawlowski, approved May 8, 2001."
"description":"Here you go, people of Oregon: your legislature apparently thought the best way to record your tartan was registering it with a private company."
"description":"This gigantic sett was used in some bedding I got for about $5, which I guess just goes to show that machine-operated looms are capable of doing better tricks for less money than human-operated ones."
"description":"This is an approximation of the pajamas I was wearing when I wrote the tartan designer. They weren't actually a tartan. I guess modern weavers feel they ought to show off the fact that they can do fancy tricks with their looms."
},
"Neale's PJs II":{
"sett":"W3 G24 Y2 W2 G2 W2 G2 W1",
"description":"More of my PJs. This one is an exact copy, I can count the threads in this fabric."
"description":"Another pair of PJs. Why do I keep adding pajamas? It's almost as if I feel like the idea of weaving patterns being a guarded secret is laughable!"
},
"Neale's PJs IV":{
"sett":"R5 (333)12",
"description":"More pajamas."
},
"Neale's PJs V":{
"sett":"GR8 BK3 W2 BK3 Y2 BK4 LB1 BK8",
"description":"Yet more pajamas. I'd love it if somebody made a kilt out of this and recorded peoples' reactions at a Scottish festival or something."
"description":"I (Neale) created this based on Shrek's pants in a couple of frame grabs from the movie. It appears to be different from the recently-released \"Shrek's Tartan\"."
},
"Texas Bluebonnet":{
"sett":"G4 R2 B16 W2 R2 W2 LB16 W2 LB16 W2 Y1",
"description":"Based off a jpeg at the Texas Scottish Heritage Society. (Why did they save it as a jpeg?) The first blue in their image was only 15 threads wide, I figured that was a typographical mistake given every subsequent blue was 16, even in the repeats. According to the aforementioned web page, it was designed by June Prescott McRoberts, and adopted as the official state tartan on May 25, 1989."
},
"Utah":{
"sett":"W1 B6 R6 B4 R6 G18 R6 W4",
"description":"Kudos to Utah for putting the sett right into 1996's SB-13. This is the tartan as specified by law. The photograph on Utah's Online Library seems to have a final white threadcount of 3."
},
"Washington State":{
"sett":"W3 R6 B36 G72 LB6 BK6 Y2",
"description":"Adopted 1991 by the spartan RCW 1.20.110."