Mouse wrote: ↑Mon Feb 16, 2026 10:26 pm
I guess I am not worried by any of this gender inclusive stuff from what ever direction it is comming from or for whatever reason. I currently live in a country where the laws are such that I am free and protected to wear whatever I like from the clothes available under any label. I revel in being different and special as I go about my life. I get people looking at me and interested in me, as I never had in trousers.
I do not think that the vast majority of men, will ever go into Urban and buy a skirt. Two things lead me to this conclusion.
1. The vast majority of women, 50% of the human race are voting with their feet and buying more and more trousers. Skirts are now only used by them to send messages, get attention and sometimes because they feel like wearing a skirt for comfort. so if women are coming out of skirts, why would men be going the other way?
2. A particular country has a proud history of men who wear skirts and a special skirt just for men, with history and honour combined in the skirt. Most men of the country rarely go near a skirt and prefer trousers. So why would men of other countries without a skirting heritage be any different?
So we are left with a simple truth. If you want to wear a skirt follow Nike and "Just Do It" There will never be a time where it is normal to wear a skirt as a man. There will be flashes of acceptance or curiosity with odd celebrities or companies making a splash for their own purposes, as we are seeing with Urban now and others before them.
But for the special independent man, a whole world of individual dressing is available to you that will set you apart from the rest of boringly dressed men. There is the opportunity to develop a whole style that is just for you. Take the clothes you want to wear and mix things up on your own body, until you find what works for you. make sure that what is in your wardrobe is a range of clothes that really excites and pleases you.
Commercial things like this Urban inclusive pitch, provide opportunity to move things with your family and friends, as do celebrities in alternative clothes. I made use of a kickstarter gender neutral skirt launch to move from kilts to standard skirts in my creative process.
Your basic argument reflects a causal model:
“If women abandon X, X becomes devalued meaning men won’t adopt.”
That comes from a status-based theory of gendered items:
• Masculine items moving to women resulting in status retained or rises
• Feminine items moving to men meaning status loss risk
Historically, that pattern has some truth (e.g., makeup for men declining in the West after early modern periods). So your skepticism isn’t irrational—it’s grounded in long-standing asymmetry.
But what’s changing now:
• Androgyny cycles are returning
• Gender expression norms are liberalizing
• Streetwear blurred gender silhouettes
• Youth cohorts show higher comfort with nonbinary aesthetics
So the structural conditions are different from past eras. Gender inclusive retail expands male clothing choice regardless of whether women’s skirt usage declines because they are independent axes.