Blayre is a modern spelling of Blair, a Scottish surname from a field or plain.
Blayre is a modern spelling variant of *Blair*, a name with deep roots in the Scottish Gaelic landscape. The original *blàr* means 'plain,' 'field,' or 'battlefield' — the wide, open ground of the Scottish Highlands where clans met, cattle grazed, and history was made. Blair began as a place name, then became a clan surname across Scotland, before crossing into given-name use in the 19th and 20th centuries.
It belongs to a long tradition of Scottish place-names-turned-surnames-turned-forenames: names like Ross, Brodie, Cameron, and Stirling that carry the geology and geography of Scotland in their very syllables. As a given name, Blair gained particular visibility in the English-speaking world through cultural touchstones across several decades — from the Canadian television series *The Facts of Life* (whose character Blair Warner defined a certain preppy archetype in the 1980s) to *The Blair Witch Project* (1999), which embedded the name in a generation's pop culture consciousness, to Tony Blair's tenure as UK Prime Minister, which gave it a more political association. The name has been used for both boys and girls, sitting comfortably in the tradition of gender-neutral Scottish surnames.
The spelling *Blayre* — with the added 'y' and 'e' — represents the contemporary naming practice of using alternative spellings to signal individuality within a familiar sound. The phonetics are identical, but the orthography marks the bearer as distinct, a variation on the original without abandoning its roots. This aesthetic choice places Blayre squarely in the early 21st century while the name's soul remains firmly on a windswept Scottish plain.