I'll bet that outfit was smashingly good looking



Picture please




Uncle Al



I've had a similar experience. For the last several years I've worn one of my cotton, bottom of the knee length, skirts when I drive the 700+ miles each way to visit my brother. On my drive home I arrange to be near the small town of Corning in the northern Sacramento valley around the time I would like to eat my evening meal. There is a local hamburger chain in that area that I discovered years ago and I now choose to visit the branch right off of I-5 in Corning for its convenience. It's in a converted gasoline station so I pull up and park, walk in and place my order at the counter and find a seat. They prepare my order and deliver it to me, I eat it and leave. I've never had a single comment, and I'm not sure I've ever seen a second look from staff or other customers.Darryl wrote:Detoured through Middletown for a Moby Dick fish sandwich. Parked, walking in the front door to find two ladies standing up to eyeball my approach and the girl behind the counter walking forward with a smile to take my order. Everyone had sat back down by then so when I got my sandwich and Coke I sat and ate, then walked out with a grin.
Well, I have to admit, being comfortable wearing a skirt in public does (at least for me) require a certain enjoyment from shocking people. It's much like wearing any other new, unusual, or off-beat fashion in order to assert oneself or gain attention.Couya wrote:I am getting the impression that a lot of us are secretly upset that we don't get more comments and attention from the general public.
Dunno about 'smashing' but I have a fondness for Navy and (basic) black outfits...skirted and otherwise.Uncle Al wrote:Darryl,
I'll bet that outfit was smashingly good looking
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Uncle Al
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Este modelo de falda es bien audaz.skirtingseattle wrote:My initial experiences wearing skirts out in public (miniskirts 13 to 15" top to bottom) were that virtually no one noticed. These were solid, dark colors and could have easily been taken for short shorts from afar. Since I don't have eyes in the back of my head, it is impossible to know that there weren't more people who noticed. Perhaps they only stole a look when I wasn't facing in their direction or when I had passed them by. Most people have been trained not to stare (as this can be interpreted as a sign of aggression), so my individual, subjective opinion on this subject is not statistically reliable. When I go out, I don't look at every person in my field of view to see if they have seen me (and me in a skirt) as I am also not trying to be aggressive in that way towards them either.
The reason why I believe a man wearing a skirt or kilt solicits more attention that the individual wearer believes they are soliciting is because once I started wearing my kilts out into public (not my miniskirts) with family and friends, they tell me that they notice a large number of people doing double-takes and staring when I am not facing in their direction - many more than I noticed when wearing skirts. Now it could be that the kilts I am wearing, which are much more bulky and longer (~20") than my miniskirts, are more noticeable and therefore solicit more looks. Without a scientifically controlled experiment, it is impossible for me to say if kilts that I wear are more noticeable and solicit more attention than miniskirts that I wear. However, I think it is safe to say that all of our individual, subjective experiences may not be giving us the whole picture as to our impact on others by being "seen in a skirt".
Food for thought.
No doubt some of that occurs. Sometimes you can hear a small commotion behind you, sometimes you can see the reflection in a store window, and so forth.skirtingseattle wrote:...The reason why I believe a man wearing a skirt or kilt solicits more attention that the individual wearer believes they are soliciting is because once I started wearing my kilts out into public (not my miniskirts) with family and friends, they tell me that they notice a large number of people doing double-takes and staring when I am not facing in their direction - many more than I noticed when wearing skirts. Now it could be that the kilts I am wearing, which are much more bulky and longer (~20") than my miniskirts, are more noticeable and therefore solicit more looks. Without a scientifically controlled experiment, it is impossible for me to say if kilts that I wear are more noticeable and solicit more attention than miniskirts that I wear. However, I think it is safe to say that all of our individual, subjective experiences may not be giving us the whole picture as to our impact on others by being "seen in a skirt."