I have just finished reading all nine pages of this thread and not one time do you mention where you purchase all of your attractive sounding skirts and accessories. Would you enlighten us please?

They came from a mix of places. Some, including the silk skirts and the simple cotton knit calf-length ones are Sapphire's. Two of the velvet ones, plus the tiered skirts, are from Wal-Mart; the blue velvet one from QVC; the pair of plaid ones from Dress Barn (which deserve more mileage out and about); and the most recent ones, plus the new waistcoats, are from Historical Emporium.skirted_in_SF wrote:Carl,
I have just finished reading all nine pages of this thread and not one time do you mention where you purchase all of your attractive sounding skirts and accessories. Would you enlighten us please?
The idea of heading off to work in a skirt &c. is awfully attractive to me: putting on a dress shirt, maybe with tie and even a waist-length jacket or vest, wool or twill knee-length skirt in a coordinated color (longer in cold weather), and tights or knee socks, and heading down the hill, waiting on the platform, riding the train, walking to the subway, etc. In my mind's eye, it just seems so cool.crfriend wrote:... I started wearing skirts to work in the middle of a heat-wave last summer and have continued a couple of times per week since, even in the dead of winter....
It is cool, and I count myself fortunate that I work in a place that values me for what's inside my head and what I can do with it. I find it very liberating to be able to put on a skirt in the morning and go about my business.AMM wrote:The idea of heading off to work in a skirt &c. is awfully attractive to me: putting on a dress shirt, maybe with tie and even a waist-length jacket or vest, wool or twill knee-length skirt in a coordinated color (longer in cold weather), and tights or knee socks, and heading down the hill, waiting on the platform, riding the train, walking to the subway, etc. In my mind's eye, it just seems so cool.
I felt precisely the same way this time last year when I was subject to active hostility by my immediate superios; I kept my head down, hit all the technical marks they demanded of me, and cherished the very bright line that I could cross fashion-wise once I transitioned from work-hours to off-hours.But have not the slightest desire to actually show up at my current workplace in anything but the drabbest of (male) business casual clothing. A pink dress shirt with a tie is about as transgressive as I've ever felt like being. There's something about working for a large, multinational company, with a corporate culture that's a lot like Dilbert (only not anywhere near as amusing) that leeches away any desire to show more than the minimum of "personality" or to invest much of one's self in the job.
This is standard dull-headed thinking that can still pervade massive companies: the "Corporate Mentality" if you will. It's needless and pointless, but it does tend to solidify the hierarchy and points up who is allowed to abuse whom.FWIW, I am told that someone (male) asked if he could wear a kilt to work, and was told: no. (Although I did see someone in a kilt at the London (UK) office's Christmas party -- maybe the UK people are less tight-assed about these things.)
That's certainly an option, and summer is coming. Why not give it a go?I have sometimes considered bringing a skirt along and changing in the bathroom on the train on the way home. (The new Metro-North MU trains have really nice bathrooms with coathooks and enough room to change.) It might be a nice way to mark the transition from wage-slavery to freedom.
I agree, go for it. And I just read of something similar in the book "The Great Railway Bazaar"...the author was on a train from Delhi to southern India, and aboard it where many Tamil men, who, as soon as they were aboard, used sheets to "toga" themselves, so they could easily change from "Delhi" corporate into their traditional sarongs. Seems like they're all on the same wavelength as you.AMM wrote:.
I have sometimes considered bringing a skirt along and changing in the bathroom on the train on the way home. (The new Metro-North MU trains have really nice bathrooms with coathooks and enough room to change.) It might be a nice way to mark the transition from wage-slavery to freedom.
I count myself fortunate in that if I'm in a good enough frame of mind to wear a skirt out and about I'm in a good enough frame of mind to be friendly -- perhaps not outgoing, but at least friendly. I'm also more likely to have a bit of a smile on my face.JRMILLER wrote:Well done [..]! The trick is always to continue to be "out there" and demonstrate to the people that while we [have] an interesting concept in dressing, we are otherwise good and kind people.
I'm not a "kilt type"; the assorted "rules and regulations" seem too strict for me, and I'm after a look that is too dressy for the uber-casual "modern" kilt style. So I settled on skirts that suit my personal aesthetic. My very long ones would have been too hot for yesterday: I would have par-boilled myself. So I settled one of my lightweight tiered skirts, a white shirt, and my red waistcoat. I fear that my very elegant long looks are going to have to wait until autumn until I can wear them again!I almost always get the double-takes too, however, the kilts are generally conversation starters, the sarongs just get odd looks.
Given how tabular Ohio is, I can definitely appreciate the humour in that![...] the "Ohio" clan from the highlands of Mt. Vernon (a nearby "hill" in Ohio).