Yes Randy you do have that right as does anyone and it does not matter whether they've been here since the beginning or not - all members have the same "rights", but as long as I am the moderator here such suggestions should be done via a PM and not publicly posted, which is what I should have done as well with my reply so I apologize to all - I plead a long, bad day in town does things to one's patience...
Still all in all topics change, morph, etc. sometimes for the worse sometimes for the better, but so far the majority reading this one (including myself) have found it interesting and enlightening so it will remain as is.........
as to the original question
I wonder how much shirts with all that fringe were actually worn back in the day and if they weren't more of a dress item.
Based on a plethora of primary doumentation, said fringe was apparently widely used on such shirts..........
here's just a couple of examples,
"You expressed apprehension that the rifle dress of General Morgan may be mistaken hereafter for a waggoners frock, which he, perhaps, wore when on the expedition with General Braddock, there is no more resemblance between the two dresses, then between a cloak and a coat; the waggoners frock was intended, as the present cartman’s to cover and protect their clothes, and is merely a long coarse shirt reaching below the knee; the dress of the Virginia riflemen who came to Cambridge in 1775, was an elegant loose dress reaching to the middle thigh, ornamented with a great many fringes in various parts meeting the pantaloons of the same material and color, fringed and ornamented in corresponding style."
John Trumbull, Personal letter, 1780
Their whole dress is also very singular, and not very materially different from that of the Indians; being a hunting shirt somewhat resembling a waggoner’s frock, ornamented with a great many fringes.....
According to the number and variety of the fringes on his hunting shirt, and the decorations on his powder horn, belt, and rifle, he estimates his finery, and absolutely conceives himself of equal consequence, more civilized, polite, and more elegantly dressed than the most brilliant peer at St. James’s
A Tour of the United States of America by John Ferdinand Dalziel Smyth. Smyth toured Virginia and the Carolinas in the years immediately before the Revolution - his book was published in 1784