You can find information on Scottish Tartans online at the Scottish Tartans Organization website. Once on the page, you can find information on the museum, operating hours and contact options.
On the Scottish Enterprise, one can expect to find information relating to the company history. However one can also find job information, including job openings.
One can find information on Scottish equitable life insurance by visiting the official Scottish Equitable Lives website. There is a variety of information available on this website as well as the Scott Equitable Best Life Cover website.
You can find many different sources for information regarding all different types of Scottish Athletics with the help of Google. You simply type in "Scottish Athletics" without the quotation marks and you will get plenty of information.
There are several websites online relating to the various chapters of Scottish Rite in the US and Canada. It would be advisable to find the one that relates to where you live although it is possible to write to them and request information.
Tartans are generally made of wool, which is a traditional fabric commonly used for making traditional Scottish kilts and other clothing items. Wool is known for its durability, warmth, and ability to hold dye colors well, making it a popular choice for tartan designs.
If one is looking for contemporary information, then recent articles in international or Scottish newspapers and magazines would be a good place to start. If the information one is searching for is of a historical nature, then one should be using the services of a local library.
One can find information on finances in Scotland from the following sources: Scottish Government website, Care Info Scotland, SAAS General Information, NI Direct, to name a few.
A person can find more information about the SRU rugby union from several different places. Some of these places include Scottish Rugby and Wikipedia.
One can find scottish golf club at many sports shops in the United States and around the world. Dick's Sporting Goods is the best place to find Scottish golf clubs.
One can find a Scottish fold kitten in Canada on the internet. One of the most popular websites to find this is Petfinder. You may also find this on a website called Breedlist.
English families do not have tartans. True, but then not all Scottish families did either. Tartan patterns tended to be specific to a particular weaver of tartan - so obviously there were close links to familys and clans's - but not the one for one that is much touted. Indeed many Scots would wear more than one style of tartan not just the one - some from the same weaver (giving mutliple family tartans), others from other towns etc. After the Jacobite rebellion had subsided Scottish emigre's in London wrote to the Clan Chiefs and asked them to confirm their tartans for a definitive list. Only at this point did the tartans get tied into a specific clan. Famously the Clan Chief of the MacPhersons wrote to Wilsons the well know tartan manufacturer (and the first company to formalise and even invent some tartans) to confirm his tartan. They looked up their records and found Tartan no .43 also known as Kidd as Mr Kidd had ordered it but the last order was to a Mr MacPherson in the West Indies. So they sent it to the Chief and he gave it to the Highland Society as the MacPherson tartan where it has been the standard tartan ever since. Similarly the majority of the Irish tartans were invented in the twentieth century by a single Scottish tartan manufacturer who took the colours from the counties and regions coat of arms and substitued into traditional scotish tartan designs. There is no historical evidence for the Irish wearing the kilt and the only hostorical peice of tartan in Ireland was discovered in a Ulster peat bog turned into scottish made trews! The Irish pipe bands today wear a plain saffron kilt, the colour just about proveable the garment not. Technically there is no reason why you cannot have your own tartan made up, likewise there is no reason why you can't wear any tartan that takes your fancy. There are over 2,000 of them, company's, football teams etc have registered their own. If you're clinging to a fanciful dream about William Wallace being your great grandad then I would suggest you look for nearer roots (where were your direct family born); just because the English don't have any exotic attire for men doesn't mean we don't have any history! Or if you have roots in austria then you're in luck as they had tartans too...
Scottish is not a language