PDA

View Full Version : Favorite Clothing


EchoKitty
08-29-2002, 11:26 AM
I love dresses with big shoulders and tiny waists, and pert little hats with a bit of netting over your eyes. And I love 3 1/2" pumps and stockings with seams. But I like my man to resemble Peter Fonda in motorcycle garb.

If you could fill your closet (and your spouse's closet) with clothing from a specific period, what would you choose?

LolaCocaCola
08-29-2002, 11:49 AM
Honestly?

I like this period best of all.

In the summer it's all about little skirts, tank tops and flip flops

In the winter it's all about the FLEECE, baybee! :D

EchoKitty
08-29-2002, 12:40 PM
I also love the tank tops and low jeans and that sort of thing. But if I could dress like Joan Crawford, I'd be happy. 'Course, I don't know how those outfits wear on the back of a Harley!:D

UrbanChic
08-29-2002, 12:56 PM
I love what's in now for the fall/winter. I can't wait to wear my ribbed turtle necks, cashmere sweaters, cords, boots, flat panel wool gabardine pants, short wool kilts with tights, boot-cut leather/suede pants, pea coats and cashmere scarves again.

I love clothes that are in style (not trendy, mind you) and that fit well enough to show my figure with out being tacky or cheap. I'm not really a preppy kind of gal nor am I a low-cut leopard print dress gal. I'm tastefully in-between.

EchoKitty
08-29-2002, 01:35 PM
Yeah, I don't actually WEAR Joan Crawford clothes...I'm more of a jeans-boots-sweaters kind of gal. I always wear heels. I'm more cut out for a summer look than a winter look, physically. I sort of disappear into the layers.

Ukulele Ike
08-29-2002, 04:12 PM
Well, I guess if we have threads on cooking in Cafe Society, then threads on couture are welcome as well.

Hey! I was able to resist the temptation to type "threads on threads" !


-- Uke, looking forward to hearing lots more about those little skirts, tank tops, short wool kilts, high heeled pumps, stockings with seams, suede pants, etc...

EchoKitty
08-29-2002, 05:55 PM
Uke...gaaaaarrrrtttttteeeeerrrrrrrrssssss!

Slit skiiirrrrrtttttsssss!

Plluunnngggiiinnnngg Neckkllliiinneeesss!

Annkkklllee straaaapppssss!

(Who hates the look of bib overalls on grown women?) I do!

twickster
08-29-2002, 06:07 PM
I've got good legs, so I always wear skirts to work (we're "business casual," so most women wear pants). Short skirts, long swirly skirts, medium skirts....

But my favorite kind of clothing is sweaters. I have an entire closet filled with solid-colored sweaters -- one shelf with nothing but off-white, ecru, taupe...

monica
08-29-2002, 10:26 PM
I love renaissance clothing, as well as clothing from Marie Antoinette's time. Pretty much give me anything will a long skirt, tiny waste, and plunging neckline, and I'm happy. I also like the Southern Bell outfits.

However, in this era, my clothing generally runs more along the lines of tight, low-rider jeans and tops that are either tight, somewhat low-cut, show a little midriff, or all three.

ralph124c
08-30-2002, 08:21 AM
Clothing wise, I'm a mid-Victorian: I like velvet smoking jackets, high collars and large cravats (with diamond stickpins). I also like Edwardian suits, and 1930's style fedoras..damn, it is SO inconvenient to be in the wrong time period!

vanilla
08-30-2002, 08:59 AM
I don't know, maybe the 60's.
Myself, I love black clothes, which are timeless.
I think the farhter you get from an era, the better the clothes look.
I don't know if this will ever apply to disco clothes, however.

EchoKitty
08-30-2002, 10:26 AM
I know what you mean about disco clothes, but look over your shoulder...they're coming!

Yeah, I was also born into the wrong era. I love all that pin-stripe- and-fedora stuff on guys, too.

crazyfox
08-30-2002, 12:29 PM
kinda funny, how "praire" clothing has seeped back into style.
I'm definately fond of Renaissance clothing. I wear lots of East Indian dresses, (matching pants underneath when its cold) and off the shoulder flowy cotton blouses and long elegant skirts, sandals.

crazyfox
08-30-2002, 12:32 PM
kinda funny, how "praire" clothing has seeped back into style.
I'm definately fond of Renaissance clothing. I wear lots of East Indian dresses, (matching pants underneath when its cold) and off the shoulder flowy cotton blouses and long elegant skirts, sandals or tall boots clad my feet at all times.

Has anyone noticed how incredibly ugly tennis shoes have become? UUUGH!
I recently went shopping for a pair for long walks and was utterly dismayed by the gross ugly sneakers.
I suppose sketchers and merrill are neat looking but others...nasty nasty

TheOnlySaneOne
08-30-2002, 03:20 PM
Originally posted by monica
I love renaissance clothing, as well as clothing from Marie Antoinette's time. Pretty much give me anything will a long skirt, tiny waste, and plunging neckline, and I'm happy. I also like the Southern Bell outfits.

However, in this era, my clothing generally runs more along the lines of tight, low-rider jeans and tops that are either tight, somewhat low-cut, show a little midriff, or all three.

Wow. A teenaged Doper who dresses like that exists. Be still mine beating heart...before either Luna Child or Medeas Child find this thread and thwap the heck out of me.

As for the OP, I like button-down type shirts. You can wear them regularly for semi-formal stuff, open with a T-Shirt underneath it, or closed with the sleeves pushed up.

angelicate
08-30-2002, 03:22 PM
1940-1950's era clothing, definitely. The style then was much classier than what we have now.

My favorite clothes, at this moment, would have to be any maternity stuff that isn't pastel, ruffled, or with some design on it that I *might* put my kid in when they're about 3. Before this, it was mainly capris and smaller shirts. I'm not all that fashionable.

monica
08-30-2002, 06:40 PM
quote:
______________________________________________________________________
Wow. A teenaged Doper who dresses like that exists.
______________________________________________________________________

Maybe I'm missing something her, but like what exists?

SparrowHawk
08-30-2002, 08:59 PM
Definitely Renaissance. Such yummy fabrics. And my hubby has great legs and would look terrific in tights. Or High Gothic. For some reason I am fascinated by headgear that looks like a ship in full sail.

I am with you on the "grown women in overalls" thing, but I confess I have a pair I wear when I am mural painting. It's sort of protective coloration when working with construction workers. I will not climb scaffolding in shorts and a tee shirt, no matter how hot it gets.

I like clean lines, minimum frou-frou, so the Forties stuff sounds great. The style can be flowing or tailored. Because I'm an artist and a student (YES! Just went back this fall to prepare for grad program! Aaagh!), I schlep around in shorts, tees and tanks, cotton pants, sandals. I like the rare chance to dress up and look classy for a change, but I wouldn't want to struggle with it on a daily basis.

Nostalgia for the Sixties? ::shudder::

dinahmoe
08-30-2002, 10:14 PM
I have superlong legs and a long torso, so I love the dropwaist styles of the '20s and '30s. It helps that hats work on me too.

I also look okay in '60s style minis and go-go boots:) Preferably with a big martini as an accesory.

TheOnlySaneOne
08-30-2002, 10:54 PM
Originally posted by monica
quote:
______________________________________________________________________
Wow. A teenaged Doper who dresses like that exists.
______________________________________________________________________

Maybe I'm missing something her, but like what exists?

:o Sorry. Let me back up before I become Pitted. I tend to picture all Dopers as much much older than me. To have a Doper who actually dresses like people at my school do was kinda weird at first to picture. :)

Grelby
08-30-2002, 11:31 PM
My favorite things to wear are blank, solid-colored teeshirts and loose (NOT saggy, just comfortable) pants, either jeans, cargoes or trousers. My shirt colors tend to be earth tones and neutral greens, reds, etc. Pants also tend to be dark, grays and browns, except for jeans which are always different blues. I hate shirts with slogans of companies or teams; I feel like a walking billboard.

In colder weather, loose and light long-sleeve shirts are comfy. Not TOO light, I need to stay warm. I have these soft cotton/poly blend shirts with the three buttons at the neck... I love them. And this cool green one with kind of a coarser weave and no cuffs. Oh, or a flannie over a teeshirt. I like that, too.

Yeah, I'll stop talking about my clothes, this is embarrassing.

twickster47, I LOVE long swirly skirts!

On women, I mean...

DAVEW0071
08-31-2002, 01:25 PM
Because I'm an artist and a student (YES! Just went back this fall to prepare for grad program! Aaagh!)
Woo hoo! Congratulations, sis! Go you! Med. Ill.? Thought you said you couldn't get there from here....Anyhoo, *smooch* and good luck.

As for me, I could definitely go with the tailored, 3-piece, pin-stripe suit and fedora look. Bogey, Cagney, E.G. Robinson. French cuffs. Late 30s-early 40s. I could carry that off with flair and aplomb. hey, maybe even a shoulder-holster.....

Love Rhombus
08-31-2002, 07:48 PM
Anything which protects me from the weather and prevents small dogs from attacking my genitals.

Actually, I like "unusual" clothing, if that makes sense. I'd love to have a dress shirt that's two-colored, the collar and buttons line one and the rest another...does such a thing exist? A Superfly-type suit would be fun..but I don't think I could carry it off. I love my seersucker shirts.