Quote from: Zythyra on April 29, 2009, 07:08:06 AM
I'm working on the film score... I believe we decided on b->-bleeped-<-ipes through a Marshall stack 
Z
Do kilts meet muster as androgynous dress?
S
Post Merge: April 29, 2009, 10:36:00 AM
While working I was thinking about androgynous clothing. I've been married 21 years, and before that for 24 years to another woman. Of myself, my wife and ex-wife, I am the one currently with nail polish on toes, and I am the one with the longest hair (my wife thinks I should do something different with my hair but knows not what since she's never had long hair). On the other hand, I am the bearded one. Only rarely do any of us wear a trace of makeup. I keep everything I need for the day in my purse, and my wife keeps keys and money in her pockets (and misplaces them regularly).
My wife and I are both 18s on top so we sometimes share T-shirts. Our inseams are similar, but our hips are not, which means while we don't have to move the seat when we switch drivers, we cannot exchange pants. In any case, I prefer all-cotton and she, the softer feel of synthetics. When we travel, she asks if I think she needs to bring a skirt (frankly, I never have a good answer when she asks what I think she should wear--any advise welcome). Not infrequently, we both wear tops of the same color: pink polo shirts or blue T-shirts
She wears jewelry, but generally that consists of a necklace of pearls set as a six-pointed asterisk (in lieu of engagement ring), a six-pointed star necklace, a necklace with the tablets of the covenant, and a wedding ring (copied from the one Paul Revere made for his second wife). I wear none. Last year, we used my UPS benefits to buy similar eyeglasses from the same store.
Maybe I am stealth dressing androgynously. I feel no need to appear more feminine than my wife.
Such are my thoughts at this moment,
S