h a l f b a k e r yLike gliding backwards through porridge.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Firstly, why are there no 'skirt' or 'dress' sub-categories?
It was a windy afternoon today and several women where struggling to maintain their dignity in a compromise between dangerous skirt flutterings and awkward hands-on-knees walking.
To solve this troublesome weather-induced spectator sport,
I propose small barbed weight bands that can be attached to the inside hem, and easily stored in a handbag until required. The resulting extra weight will temporarily spoil the natural volume of the skirt, but that's a small price to pay for not flashing your knickers.
Pretty much identical
Weighted_20Kilts (other than the gender of the wearer) [angel, Apr 11 2008]
The bustle
http://www.google.c...h=&safe=off&as_st=y [normzone, Apr 11 2008]
[link]
|
|
I think the weights could constitute a safety issue if the wind was high enough. Probably better to include a bungee-cord hem band. |
|
|
And, as a healthy, well-adjusted male, I'm all for high winds around unsecured skirts. |
|
|
My understanding is that particular incident was not an embarrassment - Monro's character was standing over a subway grating, and was expecting an updraft as the train went by. And in fact, the primary purpose is not so much to flash her undies as to feel the rush of wind up her legs and, well, on up from there. |
|
|
should be a requirement for men who wear kilts. |
|
|
thats what that funny furry thing just below waist level is for I believe... |
|
|
I think the furry thing just below waist
level is what the weights are intended to
conceal. |
|
|
Baked - at least for curtains. The stately houses I am used to frequenting have lead along the bottom hems to stop them flapping around in the wind. |
|
|
// flapping around in the wind. // |
|
|
You can get tablets for that now. Lay off the curried baked bean omlettes is our advice. |
|
|
Women on the Oregon Trail used to sew rocks into their hems. |
|
|
Most of them gave up and wore bloomers after the bruised ankles got to be too muh. |
|
|
Wow, [gisho], that's deserving of supporting evidence. That could open up a whole new sub-genre of visual porn. |
|
|
http//www. oregontrailbloomer sandbruises.com |
|
|
[normzone], that link doesn't work. |
|
|
This sort of reminds me of the bustles women wore in the past. Isn't that what they were designed to do? Stay down I mean? I don't think they did when pulled up by men but the wind didn't blow 'em up. I think. |
|
|
A bustle is falsies or a codpiece for the bootie (link). |
|
|
Instead of weights, which could be heavy and dangerous, you could have velcro on the inside of the skirt, which could attach to corresponding tabs worn 'round the knees, thighs, calves or what-have-you. |
|
|
Some inventions should never be made |
|
|
Hmmm .... It's practicle, but would it really make the world a better place? Me thinks not. (plus what Ian said) |
|
|
// Firstly, why are there no 'skirt' or 'dress' sub-categories? |
|
|
Because we create categories when there's something there to put in them. There aren't that many posts about dresses and skirts. |
|
|
I wonder why, though? They aren't broke, so surely we should be fixing them. |
|
|
I believe this has been baked for cloaks, where they performed an additional self-defense function. This could give shady-character-whacking capability to a skirt, so [+]. |
|
|
On that account, [jutta], I find it strangely amusing that, while we have few or no posts about skirts and dresses, we have a category labelled: Product: Alarm Clock: Extreme. |
|
|
Is this a problem? For who? Im not sure that we need to correct this. Now if you can come up with something that would keep the shorts of overweight people from riding up between their legs... That is a sight Ive seen more than enough times. |
|
|
A bone, I say! summer dresses are one of the joys of life. |
|
| |