T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
288.1 | Oh, no, not again! | NAC::BENCE | That which we accept, we teach. | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:02 | 14 |
|
I'm glad to see somebody's happy about it :-).
I thought these things had died a well-deserved death some 20 years
ago. I especially remember frosty knees and how awkward I felt
in them. Having to worry about how I sat, remembering not to bend
over (you used a sort of "bunny dip" to pick things up off the floor).
I prefer "fashion" that enhances my self-image, not restricts movement
and chaps thighs...
{cathy}
|
288.2 | ? | CNTROL::GERDE | Hear the light... | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:10 | 5 |
| re 0
Why does that make you happy? Are you going to be wearing them?
/jag
|
288.3 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:28 | 4 |
| Longer skirts hide hairy legs, so MY hemline is staying right where
it is, thank you.
Lee
|
288.4 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | UI:Where the rubber meets the road | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:30 | 2 |
| ditto. Thank goodness my mother doesn't buy me my clothes anymore.
Mez
|
288.5 | what's the prediction? | SUPER::HENDRICKS | | Tue Apr 21 1987 12:40 | 6 |
| Is the rumor that the mini will "take over", or will a wide variety
of hem lengths continue to be worn and continue to be available
in stores?
I did mini-skirts from 1967-1971, and have no desire to repeat the
experience!
|
288.6 | | MANANA::MCKEEN | Don't take NH for granite! | Tue Apr 21 1987 12:40 | 4 |
| When I think back I cannot believe how short my skirts were during
junior high and high school!
Karen.
|
288.7 | Still wearing them | WILVAX::WHITMAN | CAT SCRATCH FEVER | Tue Apr 21 1987 12:51 | 9 |
| I wasn't aware that they went out. I was out one cold night this
past winter and I saw several woman wearing them. Too nippy for
me. But I do wear them, especially in the summer when I'm going
out. Never to work, its not the right place. I also wear long
skirts too. There is also mini and there is mini... I still like
to leave some imagination to the mind.
Jude \___^.
/\ /\
|
288.8 | Sigh of contentment | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:14 | 4 |
| As a male who reached puberty in the 60's, with tastes canalized
in the mini era, i can only say *AMEN* to .0. Long poorly
fitting clothes, cowboy boots and jeans (ugh) have made for a dull
twenty years. Who knows, I might even open my eyes again :-)
|
288.9 | wow! | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:49 | 5 |
| Gee, maybe I'll start wearing skirts again!!!!
--bonnie
|
288.10 | Hooray for varying skirts! | NETCOM::HANDEL | | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:52 | 16 |
| re: .0, .8
I bet you guys will hang around under the stairwells too.!!
(Like the guys in my high school.)
Never in a million years will we be dictated to as we were during
the 60's. Skirt lengths will vary - each to her own taste and figure.
I specifically remember our high school code saying that the skirt
was too short if it didn't touch the floor if the person wearing
it was kneeling. Boys also had to wear t-shirts... explain that
- boys covered, girls uncovered... a little bit of a double standard?
But I think we all looked better then than a lot of the kids look
now! Yuk!!
|
288.11 | Hooray for having minds of our own | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Tue Apr 21 1987 15:33 | 11 |
| When I was 20 years old in 1970 every dress and skirt in my wardrobe
was a mini-skirt. I wore them to work everyday in an office that
didn't allow slacks or pantsuits! I felt comfortable in them back
then when I was 20 and looked about 17, but I have no desire to
repeat the performance.
I think people should wear whatever they feel like wearing and not
what somebody writes in the paper will be the look for fall.
Lorna
|
288.12 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:17 | 5 |
| I could never give up the comfort of long, full midi skirts. I
will be greatly annoyed if they get hard to find in stores and I
have to start sewing again. I believe that a lot of us who did
mini's in the 60's will feel quite free to demand a variety of skirt
lengths in the stores!
|
288.13 | I love those skirts!!! | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Spring Fling | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:17 | 12 |
| RE.0 The mini-skirt returned in popularity in '84 or '85. I didn't
wear one until I could, which was last year and I LOVE THEM.
I have one in light pink that just does wonders to my appearance:
my boyfriend loves them and boy do they turn heads.
As for picking things up, I'll put up with that. I think I will
buy (or sew) one in red.
I love the leather ones, too....
Cathy (getting wilder and wilder):-)
|
288.14 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:18 | 17 |
| I have to admit I shuddered when I saw the fashion update that included
mini-skirts. I can't imagine how I will learn to walk in them again;
I'm using to striding out in my mid-calf skirts and low heels.
But I agreed with .09 (I think) that women aren't as likely to be
dictated to by fashion as they were in the 60's. I didn't buy
any skinny knit shirts last year when they were in fashion (didn't
seem like a good investment and looked awful on me), so I don't
expect to change my wardrobe because Paris thinks I should.
But what happens is that everyone else begins wearing what is declared
to be fashion, and after a while, it begins to look *normal* and
okay to the most firm minded of us, and what we have been wearing
begins to look old and dated, even to us. So who knows if I really
will give in, if only for protective coloration.
|
288.15 | Mini Skirts | CSC32::JOHNS | God is real, unless declared integer | Tue Apr 21 1987 18:02 | 7 |
| I think quite a few young women will go along with the "new" fashion,
but that most of us "older" folks will do whatever we please.
I loved mini-skirts when they were popular before, but I was very
young and had the figure for it. I do remember that my mother never
let fashion rule her, and can you imagine your grandmother in a
mini?!
Carol
|
288.16 | again? | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Tue Apr 21 1987 18:14 | 5 |
| Gee, seems like every couple years I hear that minis are coming back. I
don't think it will ever become the same widespread trend that it was back
in the '60s.
...Karen
|
288.17 | And I'd snigger at hot pants too! | PSTJTT::BUGSY | | Tue Apr 21 1987 21:14 | 12 |
| Oh, I've been reading this one with a smile.
I just thank God that this time around, when fashions are again
leaning in favor towards the young, I'm old enough to chuckle and
NOT feel threatened....
Ask me if I care that mini skirts are back???
Hee hee... nope!! I'm beyond the grasp of THAT kind of fashion..
I'm 33 and have *awful* legs... and I'm so PLEASED :*)
bugsy
|
288.18 | but fashion is supposed to be FUN | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Wed Apr 22 1987 09:50 | 21 |
| I notice that "refusing to be dictated to by fashion" always seems
to mean refusing to wear anything new and never seems to include
choosing new styles that are either flattering or fun to wear
or both.
I picked up a whole new wardrobe of oversized blouses with padded
shoulders (well, three, but that's a wardrobe for me) and a big
gold silk jacket that looks like something a rock singer would wear--
I love it. I wear them with my four-year-old jeans.
I'll continue to choose what I like, whether it's fashionable or
not. I happen to like miniskirts, so I'll probably buy a couple
for the summer (freezing to death in them? Why wear them in the
winter????). I'm leaning to red leather.
I never did like midis. They make my calves look a mile wide and
they get caught in car doors. So I don't wear them. I know women
who look great in midis. They should wear them. What's the big deal?
--bonnie
|
288.19 | The shorter the better! | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Spring Fling | Wed Apr 22 1987 09:57 | 19 |
| Bonnie, glad to see that you are so enthusiastic about this topic.
I remember the time when I lived at home, I had so much money, I
bought everything and I was always "in style". Now that I live
on my own and the money isn't so free, I have to be "shop conscious"
and buy what looks good and is reasonbly priced.
I really like the skirts and because they don't require much material,
they are fairly simple to sew and cheap too. So, I will have to
take some serious time and make a couple for the summer.
I too wouldn't wear 'em in the winter. I think a cotton mini with
a shortsleeve shirt with ankle socks and aerobic shoes is one of
my most comfortable outfits.
Too bad we can't wear anything like that at work.
Heres to tanned legs and short short skirts.
Cathy :-)
|
288.20 | what exactly do we mean by a mini-skirt? | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Wed Apr 22 1987 10:18 | 16 |
|
So the mini is coming back. I just wonder what length they are calling
a "mini" this time.
I well remember visiting New York in '69 when the mini was *very* popular
in europe, and being told by my host that "everybody [all the women]
in NY are wearing them" and being bemused as during my entire stay
I never saw a single woman wearing what my european eyes thought of
as a mini-skirt. I did however see a lot of skirts a few inches above
the knee line.
/. Ian .\
PS a true mini skirt is approximately the same length as a tennis dress.
:-)
|
288.21 | Micro Minis | CSC32::JOHNS | God is real, unless declared integer | Wed Apr 22 1987 10:46 | 7 |
| I remember the short short mini skirts being referred to as
"micro-mini's". Otherwise, a mini was a skirt above the knee.
Most of mine showed about 6 or 7 inches above the knee.
For the really short ones, there was matching bloomers/underwear.
Anyone remember? :-)
Carol
|
288.22 | New is a matter of perspective | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Wed Apr 22 1987 11:55 | 14 |
| I don't think anyone should assume that just because a person doesn't
care to adopt one certain style of "new fashion" that that means
they don't like *any* of the new styles! I happen to love my Guess
jeans and they haven't been around that long.
You "younger" women must remember that some of us, such as myself,
wore minis for literally years! I wore them from the age of 17
to 22! To me they are *not* new! They are still *old*! They are
what I was wearing 17 to 20 years ago. It's like going back in
time to me, not ahead. Geez, can't wait till you start calling
hip hugging, bell-bottomed jeans with tie-die t-shirts "new"!!
Lorna
|
288.23 | what's in style vs what I like | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Wed Apr 22 1987 12:02 | 20 |
| There's a difference between wearing what fashion dictates whether you like it
or not and wearing what's in style because you like it, no matter what it is.
I have recently reached my goal weight, and I am not going to hide all this work
with oversized blouses and sweaters!
On the other hand, I've always been heavier in the legs. I remember back in
6th grade or so, probably in the '69 mini craze, when I wore a new miniskirt to
school. One of my "friends" on the bus asked me if my legs were so heavy
because I wore skirts in the winter. Thank you very much.
So, I'll have to check out these new miniskirts and see how they look/feel on
me. But since I'm so short, they'll probably come down to my knees or close
to them anyway. :-)
And, for the record, my grandmother's legs are much sexier than mine, though
I kind of doubt she'd wear a miniskirt. My mother's, too. Too bad I take
after my father...
Jill
|
288.24 | times that were still are | PARITY::TILLSON | | Wed Apr 22 1987 14:11 | 8 |
| But Lorna...I _still_ wear hiphugging bellbottoms and tie-dyed tshirts
;-) ;-) and I still go to Grateful Dead concerts, and listen to
Joni and Bob and...war is still a shabby thing. Us old hippies
are still hangin' on.
Give peace a chance,
Rita
|
288.26 | Slacks for me, thanks! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Apr 22 1987 14:39 | 17 |
| re .24
But, Rita, YOU look cute in micro-minis!
Wanna know what I look like in them, at my height?? <bleah....!>
Of course, tall-girl stores do not usually carry the latest fashion
crazes anyhow - specially-made clothes in oddball sizes are
sufficiently expensive that most of those of us who wear them never
buy anything we think is a fad; it's not worth it at the prices
we have to pay (yes, I used to sew all my own clothes - no time
these days!).
Of course, most of you have never, ever seen me in a skirt anyhow,
unless it is a (floor-length, full-circle) folk dancing costume!
I'll stick to wearing slacks to work, and mid-length skirts when
protocol requires.
/Charlotte
|
288.27 | yea play some Hendrix, I'm in the mood | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Your all STARS team, CSC/US | Wed Apr 22 1987 17:24 | 14 |
| I agree with whoever said minis are old. I remember in high school
there were major argumants over just how short a skirt could be
and stay legal. I also remember (blush) how short I wore skirts
back then. Not for me any more that was pounds ago.
I also remember that skirt lengths were supposed to be stock market
indicators. Not sure how that all works but with the sixties styles
comming back can ratted hair and bellbottoms be far behind?
In some magazine (psych today or some such) I read that people identify
for life with the styles and opinions that were popular in their 20's.
Watch out world. Us old hippys are now the technocrats and we won't
support war in Nicaragusa any more than we did in Viet Nam. liesl
|
288.28 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Wed Apr 22 1987 17:31 | 7 |
| Re .24, Rita, well, last week I wore my Guess jeans to a Billy Idol
concert and had a wonderful time :-). But, I agree war is still
shabby (and I saw Bob Dylan last summer Great Woods - cool lookin'
dude for somebody in his 40's.)
Lorna
|
288.29 | well.. on Dylan | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Apr 22 1987 23:54 | 8 |
| Bob Dylan will be a cool lookin due no matter his age -
an 'un reconstructed late 60's hold over'
and who likes "lay lady lay"?
Bonnie
|
288.30 | Hey Good Looking | SONATA::HICKOX | Stow Vice | Thu Apr 23 1987 00:27 | 6 |
|
I say "to each their own". If you like them, wear them, if not
don't worry about it. I'll keep looking at women no matter what
they wear. I'm not dead yet.
Mark
|
288.31 | I said before, fashion should be fun | DEBIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Apr 23 1987 09:21 | 19 |
| re: .30
Right on! And that's how I feel about wearing clothes. I don't have
long legs or height, but just because I won't look like someone from
the pages of Vogue won't stop me from wearing a miniskirt if I feel
good in it.
I told my brother (two years younger than me) about this discussion,
and he had a good laugh about it because except for the people who
feel it's old-hat, the rest sounds just exactly like the arguments
we went through about whether miniskirts should be allowed in high
school and how mini is mini. He said it made him feel young again.
Hey, Lorna -- maybe we should take your Guess Jeans and my miniskirt
to the next Billy Idol concert and see if we can get in the front
row??? :-)
--bonnie
|
288.32 | you like em? you wear em! | NEWVAX::BOBB | I brake for Wombats! | Thu Apr 23 1987 14:18 | 25 |
| It's interesting to watch the fashion designers introduce "new"
ideas every year and then be able to go back into my closet or my
Mom's closet and pull out that style from the last time it was out!
Mini-skirts....good grief! I wore them for more years than I like to
remember and blush when I look at pictures from that time, or when I
come across a skirt in the back of closet (I have shirts that go down
farther than some of these skirts!) Though I can still remember the
arguments "No, Mom, it's got to be shorter!"
I believe (and sincerely hope) that most people no longer have to
buy what is "in fashion" just because it is in fashion. I certainly
don't. If a new fashion is something I like, then I buy it, but
only then.... which means I've had a few lean years in there where
either I sew what I want or keep wearing the old stuff!
You guys might like to look at mini's, but they are a pain to wear!
You have to be careful of everything you do (walk, sit, stoop,
lean....ugh, NOT ME!!)! Summer heat might be the only justifiable
reason for wearing them (unless you like them - then, go for it!)
If you men like them so much, how come you don't wear kilts?
Oh well..... to each his/her own!
janet b. (a mostly out-of-current-style dresser)
|
288.33 | whatever feels right is fashion | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:26 | 11 |
| I have always been off the fashion trend, I have been wearing mini's
for years, my mom wouldn't allow me to wear them when growing up,
even in the army, I always hemmed my "nancy nurse" uniforms higher
the regulations. I wear what ever I please, but when everyone starts
catching up to me, depending on the item, I change again. I still
love wearing antique clothes, and have made quite a few copies.
I design sweaters, and have been wearing some really unique ones
for years also. I agree with ya'll, what ever feels good to wear,
wear it.... As for my mini's, I'll never give em up.....
vivian
|
288.34 | Ma kilt is no tae popular the noo! | GENRAL::FRASHER | Disguised Colorado mountain man | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:36 | 25 |
| re .32
If I wore my kilt, people would laugh at me. In most cases, if
a woman wears a mini-skirt, she won't get laughed at, maybe stared
at but not laughed at. But, then, I don't wear spiked hair either.
If I wasn't the only bloke in Colorado wearing a kilt, I might wear
mine.
The way I see the issue is that if a woman feels comfortable with
a new fashion then she has every right to it. If she doesn't feel
comfortable then she doesn't have to partake. There may be pressure
on shoolgirls but not on adults. My wife wore a white mini-skirt
at our wedding. She wouldn't wear one now. She wore a mini-dress
to a friends wedding. I had to hang up her jacket because when
she raised her arms you could almost see her belly button. Its
been hanging in the closet for 22 years and I won't let her get
rid of it.
I'm all for them. I may well be a dirty old man, but I like to
see mini-skirts. I also like bikinis and my wife *does* wear one.
Of course, I have to wear one in return. ;-)
Reading through these replies, I think that this topic has the largest
ratio of smiley faces/reply of any other topic. :-)
Spence
|
288.35 | And they said it wouldn't return! | CURIE::FREIDUS | | Thu Apr 23 1987 17:44 | 28 |
|
Mini's are great for the youngsters who really believe they are
the *newest* style. During the 60's the shorter the skirts, the
more we felt in control of our own lifestyles. I once was sent
home from school because I had the Nerve to wear a Mini skirt. Of
course my skirt was about an inch above my knee, and the principals
was around her ankle!! So it was just a Sign- O- the Times!!!!
Just thinking of the trouble it was to keep your legs closed all
the time, and bending over was cause for a car accident!!! No
I enjoyed the 60's clothing when they really made a statement.
Now they just make me laugh!!!!!
>re:288.32
And By the way, the 60's clothing is on the way back in all fashions..
Recently came back from a visit to San Diego. The biggest *fad*
seems to be the bleached out bluejeans. Naturally they cost 40+
but I can remember using Clorox and bleaching the same designs in my
wranglers jeans in the bathtub at my mothers house.
If the clothing is coming back theres hope for the sentiment to
return as well.
J.
|
288.36 | | MSTIME::RABKE | | Thu Apr 23 1987 18:14 | 10 |
|
How many women will be wearing minis to work? Or do you think they
will mostly keep them for after work?
I think that we have just gotten out of those awful binding suits
into some nice dresses & more causual suits, why go to the other
extreme. Also, I would definitely think 2ce in wearing a mini if
I wanted to have a "professional" appearance at work. (I guess
that depends on what your profession is.)
|
288.37 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | | Fri Apr 24 1987 10:32 | 9 |
| One particularly disdainful teacher at the high school I attended
was known for his snide remarks about the skirt lengths worn by
some of the girls. One day he asked me if I always wore my skirts
"mid-crotch" length. I was horrified! It was well above my knees,
but I could still sit and stay decent.
We weren't allowed to wear pant skirts or pant dresses which were
much more comfortable, but short short skirts were fine.
|
288.38 | about face | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Fri Apr 24 1987 10:45 | 8 |
| Back in my high-school days (67-71) the big issue was
allowing the girls to wear jeans. Minis were OK but
Levis were not. I wonder if todays' high-schoolers will
have to fight to bring back the minis ?
Re. Kilts - Robert Heinlein made a good case for them
in "Time Enough For Love". As the lead charachter says,
it's a great way to conceal a gun :-)
|
288.39 | No fighting for it here! | PEACHS::WOOD | Is it *really* Friday?? | Fri Apr 24 1987 10:57 | 18 |
|
re.: .38
> I wonder if todays' high-schoolers will have to fight to bring
back the minis ?
No fighting for it here in the Atlanta area.. They are already
very popular with high-schoolers....
And while visiting California I happened to pass a Catholic
school while the students were outside and was amazed at the length
of the girls uniform skirts... they were close to mini-skirt length!
Seems they are back -- at least for the teen-agers.
Myra
|
288.40 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Fri Apr 24 1987 11:02 | 12 |
| Re. mini-skirts, I've never forgotten a comment made to me by a
co-worker back in 1970 when I worked in a large insurance company
in an office pool of paper pushers. The woman who sat opposite
to me commented on the fact that the guy in back of me looked up
everytime I leaned forward so he could get a look at my ass. I
wore mini skirts everyday. She went on to say, "And boy has he
gotten a good look at your ass all year!" I was quite embarrassed
since it hadn't occurred to me that everytime I leaned forward the
man sitting behind me could see my entire rear end!
Lorna
|
288.41 | ARHAD'LATOUF !!! | SHIRE::MILLIOT | Mimi, Zoziau, Vanille-Fraise & Co | Fri Apr 24 1987 11:35 | 8 |
| Wouaouh !! Les gros jambons gras et les genoux osseux vont a nouveau
abonder dans les rues !
Ooo joie intense ! Toute la ville saura que j'ai des pattes de heron
!!
Zoziau
|
288.42 | don't know what the title means | SHIRE::MAURER | A member of the A.Einstein Fan Club | Fri Apr 24 1987 12:29 | 9 |
| re: .41
Wow !! Fat legs and bony knees will again become abundant in the streets.
What a thrill ! The whole town will know that I have the legs of a heron
!!
Z.
|
288.43 | go for it!!!! | NCVAX1::COOPER | | Fri Apr 24 1987 13:12 | 5 |
| I have a few above the knee dresses that I wear to work and get a lot of
compliments from both men and women.
The mini skirt -- I'll be pulling mine out of storage!!!!!
(hope I can fit them by summer)
|
288.44 | Aye! | JUNIPR::DMCLURE | | Fri Apr 24 1987 14:54 | 4 |
| Geez! Every year it's something new! Now I've gotta go and
shorten my entire wardrobe of kilts!
-dav�
|
288.45 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Fri Apr 24 1987 16:59 | 6 |
| I don't mind the mini coming back in style, as long as it's not
the only style you'll be able to find in the stores. I want to
keep wearing my mid-calf skirts for work and other appropriate
occasions and wear minis instead of shorts in the summer (I've had
one I love for about four years). Much cooler and no more exposed.
|
288.46 | It's not how long you make it... | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Mon Apr 27 1987 09:54 | 5 |
| RE: .44 "Donal' whuurrrs yer troosers"
I'd like to have my kilt altered. The length's OK but I don't have
the same waist that I had when I was 16.
|
288.47 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Wed Apr 29 1987 18:18 | 11 |
| I hear a lot of women saying that they won't wear one because of
their figures. I don't have that problem, but I still wouldn't
wear them on a regular basis. I think women who wear them look
like little girls or look like they're trying to look like little
girls.
But, I think that just for fun maybe once or twice a year I'd wear one.
Never at work.
-Ellen
|
288.48 | Just the knees, ma'am | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Apr 30 1987 13:42 | 12 |
| I used to wear them -- but not to work. And I still have the
legs for them (although the hips have, ah, become more generous).
My hope for miniskirts is that they'll pull up other skirt lengths
to around the knee. Until then I'll keep sewing with this
eight-gore pattern I have.
And if you want to view my "silken thighs" (or whatever the pink
and foils novels are calling them this year), you'll have to wait
for me to visit a swimming pool or j'acuserie, or make private
arrangements ;-).
Ann B.
|
288.49 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Thu Apr 30 1987 16:33 | 6 |
| re .27, (just for the record :-) ), my figure isn't the reason I
won't wear mini-skirts either. Mostly, I just don't feel like it.
I already wore them for 5 years once.
Lorna
|
288.50 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Thu Apr 30 1987 16:34 | 3 |
| I meant re .47, Ellen's note. Sorry.
|
288.51 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Fri May 08 1987 15:52 | 25 |
|
A few earlier replies asked "what length is mini?" (including one of
mine).
In the early 70s I taught for a while in a single sex (girls') high
school in England. The school rule defined a legal skirt or dress as
one with the hem within 3" of the mid-knee when standing normally. A
mini was between 3" and 9" above the knee, and micro more than 9" above,
a midi between 3" and 9" below and a maxi more than 9" below.
Offenders wearing a mini or midi got 3 strokes of the cane on their
bare sit-upons and those wearing a micro or maxi got 6 (for a first
offense).
Whilst the extremes were rare I, and my fellow teachers, often had to
send girls to the headmistress for wearing minis (we were all issued
with a measuring gauge incidentally, rather like the chalking devices
used by seamstresses/tailors to mark hem lengths - if you could puff
chalk on the girl's leg with the gauge it was illegally short...)
/. Ian .\
(That school's dress regulations were sufficiently bizarre in some respects
for me to remember them still after all these years, but perhaps that
is a subject for another note... :-)
|
288.52 | Silly clothing rules | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri May 08 1987 16:06 | 9 |
| When I was in high school (before they changed the dress code so
I could wear slacks to it!), the rule was that your dress had to
touch the floor when you were kneeling down - no longer and no shorter.
So granny dresses (remember them??) were also no good, along with
minis. We also had to wear stockings. Bleah. Boys could not wear
jeans but had no other restrictions. Shirts and shoes were required
by health code in the cafeteria.
Silly, wasn't it?
|
288.53 | You've got to be kidding | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Mon May 11 1987 11:25 | 5 |
| Re .51, those male school teachers sure must have had fun with those
tape measures.
Lorna
|
288.54 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Tue May 12 1987 11:34 | 30 |
| .53� -< You've got to be kidding >-
.53� Re .51, those male school teachers sure must have had fun with those
.53� tape measures.
No Lorna, I'm not kidding. The purpose of using a chalk gauge rather
than a tape measure was to prevent any physical contact between
the (male or female) teacher and the pupil. This was a very proper
(and very expensive) girls' Public School.
I'm not sure who was more embarrassed by this: the pupils or the
staff, but the Principal caught a girl leaving a lesson with an
obviously short skirt one day and proceeded at the next staff meeting
to give a very explosive lecture on her views on what was proper
for "her young ladies" to wear. - after that we applied the rules.
It was unusual for a lesson teacher to be in this situation, since it
was the duty of the house mistresses to do a dress check on the girls
before they went to morning prayers. It required the girl to raise the
hem (usually by merely pulling the skirt up at the waist) after that
to cause an offense. This was considered particularly heinous, since
it not only violated the dress code but involved deceipt. Girls caught
before assembly were usually just sent back to the dorm to change
into something "suitable", and given an order mark for the offense.
(A more extensive dress check was performed by the gym mistress
who would check the changing rooms for illegal underwear... clearly
the male staff were not in any position to check on this part of
the uniform code).
/. Ian .\
|
288.55 | unreal | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Tue May 12 1987 12:13 | 4 |
| "illegal underwear"!?! why on earth would anyone care? Had the
girls no privacy at all? What would consititue "illegal" if it is
not too indelicate to describe? :-)
Bonnie J
|
288.56 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Tue May 12 1987 13:01 | 39 |
|
I don't think its indelicate but if you do please use moderator privilege
to deleat it:
Girls 15 and under wore:
Winter: Grey skirt, white shirt, school tie, grey cardigan trimmed
in "house colours", black buckle shoes, white knee socks trimmed in
house colours, white gym knickers (the sort of things track athletes
wear) trimmed in house colours, white vest trimmed in house colours
and pant liners in white (basically normal bikini underwear).
Summer: Pink and white "candy-stripe" dress. Footwear and underwear
as above. Vest was optional.
Girls 16 and over wore:
Winter: Black Skirt, Whites shirt, school tie, long-sleeved pullover
trimmed in house colours, black "court shoes" with 2" heels, nylon
stockings with a seam, White Gym knickers edged with house colours,
white "sports style" bra, white pant liners. Hose was held up either
with a white suspender belt (=American garter belt), or elastic garters
in house colours. Bra optional in A or B cup sizes but mandatory for
larger sizes.
Summer: Grey dress. Footwear and underwear as above.
All girls wore a school hat (straw boater in summer, felt hat in winter)
when walking out. A Dark grey gaberdeen raincoat was permitted for
inclement weather. Whits gloves were worn for meals, black gloves when
walking out, except gloves were optional in Summer. In Summer a black
blazer could be substituted for a coat.
The main "illegal underwear" problems were girls waring bras before
age 16, wearing bras with decoration on them (eg lace trim) and wearing
bikini pants rather than the cotton gym knickers. Some girls even wore
colored bra/pants sets (shock horror).
/. Ian .\
|
288.57 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Tue May 12 1987 15:05 | 7 |
| re -1:
My God, was nothing private? Girls were not even *free* to choose
their own *underwear*? Can I dare ask how anyone could know whether
bras had lace or not on them?
-Ellen
|
288.58 | another ? | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Tue May 12 1987 15:44 | 2 |
| and what happened if a girl developed into a C or D cup before
she turned 16?
|
288.59 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Tue May 12 1987 16:02 | 1 |
| I BET SHE WAS SUSPENDED SOMEHOW :-)
|
288.60 | not quite as conservative... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Tue May 12 1987 17:11 | 9 |
| Friends of mine were on sabbatical in England a few years ago, and
reported that their two adolescent daughters were at first horrified
to find out that they had to wear a white blouse and navy blue wool
skirt or navy blue wool slacks every day. The girls later came to
appreciate the dress code, and commented that they had previously spent an
awful lot of time dressing and shopping for school.
Of course, they made up for it on the weekends and totally "punked
out"!
|
288.61 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Tue May 12 1987 17:24 | 20 |
|
How did they know that bras had lace on them? well either the gym mistress
checking changing room lockers, or the school's Matron checking bedside
lockers would find the offending garments. (No constitutional freedom
from illegal search and seizure here :-)
What if they grew into a size C or D early? the rules allowed for medical
exceptions: I recall one 14 year old who had a pink slip to allow her
to wear a bra because she was a 38D. I also know she was so embarrassed
she didn't present it to her House Mistress for over a month.
Re dress codes in general: I later worked in a co-educational state
run school that proposed eliminating their (somewhat freer) dress
regulations - the result was a massive no-vote from both the girls and
the parents (since without a dress code they would have to be fashionable
and also have multiple changes of outfit.) Also remember that a dress
code benefits poorer famillies since it is virtually impossible to tell
when a uniform is a hand-me-down from elder sister.
/. Ian .\
|
288.62 | | XANADU::RAVAN | | Tue May 12 1987 19:05 | 9 |
| re .60: Gee, I don't think I'd mind uniforms much if slacks were
an option - they weren't during my school years, and we didn't even
have uniforms.
Bet it's tough keeping lint and cat fur off of the navy-blue wool,
though. Must encourage the younglings to dash straight to school
as soon as they're dressed. Clever people, those British!
-b
|
288.63 | | CSC32::JOHNS | God is real, unless declared integer | Tue May 12 1987 19:34 | 3 |
| What if the student is allergic to wool?
Carol
|
288.64 | I guess they itch like the rest of us :-{ | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Tue May 12 1987 22:47 | 2 |
| sigh
|
288.65 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Wed May 13 1987 09:57 | 14 |
|
What kind of underwear did the boys wear?
|
288.66 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Wed May 13 1987 11:58 | 13 |
|
� What kind of underwear did the boys wear?
You aren't listening Dennis: this was a Girl's school. There were
no boys.
/. Ian .\
|
288.67 | I *HATED* the gym suits - real nuisance! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed May 13 1987 13:31 | 16 |
| I'm glad I didn't go to a school with uniforms and with people checking
my underwear for compliance....ugh. It was bad enough kneeling
on the floor to see if my skirt was right, and having to wear stockings.
On the other hand, both my mother and I HATED the silly phys. ed.
outfits I had to wear in high school. The boys got to wear T-shirts
(I still have my brother's - it's great for mowing the lawn!) and
running shorts. We had cotton dresses with bloomers to go under
them. These things had to be washed, sprinkled down, and ironed
for each class -- 3 times a week! My brother's gym suit was fine
right out of the dryer, and I got so that I really resented the
time it took to press my silly wrinkly-cotton-broadcloth one so
that I wouldn't get in trouble. Bleah.
I wonder what phys. ed. classes wear now? I bet whatever it is,
it is wash-and-wear!
|
288.68 | individual uniformity | VINO::EVANS | | Wed May 13 1987 13:59 | 16 |
| Re Phys. Ed. classes. As of 5 years ago, when I quit teaching, we
had ordered t-shirts and shorts - unisex. Hand-me-down-able,
comfortable, bright, in school colors. Nice. Yes, Much much better
than the bloomers and skirts.
RE: uniforms in general. I heard at least a million complaints from
students about having to wear a uniform to gym class. BUT: look
at 'em in the hallways!! Same brand of jeans, washed-out to the
same degree, same type of shirts, same brand of sneakers/running
shoes (depending on the year), same hairdos, same colors, etc. etc.
Each indistinguishable from the next/last kid in line. Sheesh!
Flashback, Ian: *seams* in the stockings! Shades of my youth!
Dawn
|
288.69 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Wed May 13 1987 15:37 | 14 |
|
Yes I was. I meant at the co-ed state-run school.
|
288.70 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Thu May 14 1987 11:55 | 17 |
|
OK Dennis: at all schools I attended and at the state school at which
I taught the rules for boys stated "white cotton vest and underpants".
re gym wear: at the state school the gym uniform for boys was white
running shorts and white plimsolls (=sneakers). For girls the same navy
blue gym knickers and white vest as for normal day wear could be used
as gym wear (though a change was encouraged) plus white ankle socks
and plimsolls.
Incidentally at the private school the girls did gym "a la grecque"
as it said in the school prospectus... (I invite you to remember what
you may have heard or read about the dress of athletes in ancient Greece).
At least that gym uniform didn't cause laundry problems :-)
/. Ian .\
|
288.71 | "Donal' whuurrrs yer troosers..." | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Thu May 14 1987 15:59 | 13 |
|
Oh well, I guess the question would've been more relevant north
of the border. :-)
|
288.72 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Wed Jun 03 1987 11:40 | 47 |
|
I saw this in the AP news today: now what would have happened if they
had worn kilts?
Associated Press Wed 3-JUN-1987 06:52 Miniskirts
Male Students, Barred From Wearing Shorts, Don Miniskirts
EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A group of male high school students
including two football players has taken to wearing miniskirts to school
because the school's dress code forbids shorts.
"Everybody wants to wear shorts. It's wicked hot in school," said Charlie
Hankinson, a defensive end for the East Providence High School football
team who squeezed into one of his sister's skirts Tuesday.
"They (girls) get to wear miniskirts and the only shorts we get to wear
are jams," Hankinson said. "I don't think it's fair."
Jams are the popular, brightly-colored knee-length shorts now in vogue.
Hankinson said they look cooler than they feel.
"There's no rule saying we can't wear skirts," said Tom Turner, another
skirt-wearing student, who added that the dress code "promotes sexual
discrimination."
School administrators nabbed the three students with skirts soon after
they entered the school Tuesday and forced them to change into long pants.
None of the three were punished, but Hankinson said Princpial Arthur
Elmaysian warned him not to do it again.
School officials were not available for comment.
Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island affiliate of the
American Civil Liberties Union, said the dress code may be illegal and is
certainly misguided.
"One would think that in these hot days, schools would be interested in
making kids as comfortable as possible," Brown said. "If they're sweating
to death, it's not going to be easy for them to learn."
A decision by the state commissioner of education in the 1970s
"essentially said dress codes are appropriate if they are based on the
health and safety of students and on preventing disruptions," Brown said.
"It's hard to imagine how the wearing of shorts meets either of those
criteria."
|
288.73 | | DINER::SHUBIN | Time for a little something... | Wed Jun 03 1987 12:22 | 21 |
| re: boys in skirts
This happened in my high school (in NY, around 1970), and it seemed to
have helped -- the dress code died soon after.
As long as we're talking about clothing...
I thought about this last night after reading a newspaper column about
fashion: Someone decides that women's clothing should look different
this year than last (or this month than last). Pants legs move up and
down, skirts go up and down down, pads come and go, etc. Is this
because women really want to keep making these changes, or is someone
having a great time jerking them around?
I'd be mighty surprised to open a magazine and see that someone has
changed men's clothing so that business suits come with mid-calf pants,
or pearl necklaces, or pockets on the sleeves, or the waist moved up or
down from where it really is. I don't expect that to ever happen, but
I'm always surprised by what is "suggested" for women. Why is it
different?
|
288.74 | $$$$$ | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Wed Jun 03 1987 17:10 | 13 |
| RE: .73
> Is this
> because women really want to keep making these changes, or is someone
> having a great time jerking them around?
Do you really need to ask? If women are brain washed that they need to
be fashionable, and the fashion keeps changing, then someone is going
to make a lot of money. And by the way, men's fashions change too, just
not as fast. Remember the really wide ties of the early 70's?
...Karen
|
288.75 | Subtler, not just slower | DINER::SHUBIN | Time for a little something... | Thu Jun 04 1987 13:22 | 9 |
| > And by the way, men's fashions change too, just
> not as fast. Remember the really wide ties of the early 70's?
My brother is in the fashion industry, and he brought up a point like
this once. I argued that the changes in men clothing are much subtler,
not just slower. Given the variety and rate of change that women are
subjected to, the change in men's clothing is almost nil. You could
stand a few yards away from a man, and not notice many of the little
changes that differentiate this year's model from last year's.
|
288.76 | Who wears short shorts? | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Spring Fling | Fri Jun 05 1987 11:55 | 21 |
| Re. 72 My boyfriend's father is a teacher in the Salem School system
and he told me that the "girls" aren't even allowed to wear shorts
in the hot weather (except for field trips). The reason, or so
he says, was that if you allowed "shorts", the girls would wear
"short shorts" (like the runners wear) and he felt that that was
too sleezy for 7th and 8th graders.
As for changes in woman's/men's clothing, let it change. There's
so many styles to choose from right now, I feel that "anything goes".
One thing that really p***ed me off the other night was finding
a good pair of white high heeled sandals. Went to five stores
including Jordan Marsh and Filenes and nothing, nada! Oh, there
were beautiful summer pumps but I needed a sandal to wear with a
sundress. I said to myself, "these are ALWAYS in style" aren't
they? The white shoes they had all looked like moccasins with
straps, fake turquoise, fringe, metal and fake diamonds. I didn't
think these would look good with a sundress (remember those?) so
I purchased aqua pumps.
|
288.77 | style of dress affects kids' behaviour | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jun 05 1987 13:01 | 11 |
| As an ex-junior high school teacher (they say the tic'll go away
in a few years) I'll vouch for the fact that extreme styles of dress
can put the darlings right into orbit. (Not to mention the phase
of the moon, the time of day, a sneeze, or certain words)
(As a physical education teacher, I had to be careful to say "Everyone
should have two volleyballs" cuz if I said "Everyone should have
two balls...."well, you can guess...)
Dawn
|
288.78 | my 2cents | VIDEO::MORRISSEY | JJ for short | Thu Jul 30 1987 11:08 | 38 |
| This note has been quiet so here's my thought.
I love my mini's. I am 19 so I just started wearing them a couple
years ago. At first I had bought the ones with the real wide skirt,
lots of material. Well when a gust of wind came along....let's
just say that if I didn't hold the skirt down, everyone got a free
show. So now I stick to the slim ones. Fortunately, I am very
slender and can wear these. But I also wear the mid-calf skirts
and the latest ones that come just a few inches above the ankles.
I do try to stay 'in style' but I don't buy something that doesn't
look good just because everyone else is wearing it. If it's
comfortable, looks good, and is a sensible price, I buy it. If
not, well then someone else can have it.
As far as dress codes went at my high school, I'll never forget
when we got a new principal. Word had it that he wanted to enforce
a dress code. He was formerly a principal of a private, catholic,
co-ed high school which of course had a dress code. Well, he thought
that public school should be no different. He approached the school
board with a dress code something like this:
(1) no mini-skirts or shorts (shorts weren't allowed anyway)
(2) no jeans
(3) all shirts/blouses must have a collar ie. no concerts shirts
or T-shirts, etc.
(4) no sneakers except for gym class.
Can you believe it?? That would wipe out 98% of the school.
Needless to say, it didn't pass. But even just the thought of
no jeans, scared us to death!!
Anyway, as long as someone is comfortable in what they're wearing,
I say go for it!!
But I don't wear mini's to work.
JJ
|
288.79 | | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Thu Jul 30 1987 11:15 | 5 |
| re .78 the proposed dress code....
As a parent I would have strongly opposed such a code....I wouldn't
have been able to afford to re outfit all my kids with new pants
and shoes!
|
288.80 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT | The Colonel - [WRU #338] | Thu Jul 30 1987 13:12 | 13 |
|
You surpirse me (a little) - during my brief teaching career the school
district I was working in announced they were going to drop their dress
code: the complaint from both parents and female pupils was overwhelming.
They universally complained of the cost of buying fashionable clothes
so the girls could wear something different every day...
As for jeans - they are in effect a uniform. They are also functional,
long wearing, and grotesquely ugly! (I wear jeans myself - but then
I didn't own a pair until I moved to America a couple of years back...)
/. Ian .\
|
288.82 | bingo! | VIDEO::MORRISSEY | I'm wishin' on a star... | Fri Jul 31 1987 10:41 | 12 |
|
re: .79
Exactly. Once parents got wind of what he wanted, they complained
to the members of the school board so when the meeting was arranged
to discuss the matter, they dismissed the idea.
Most of the school practically lived in jeans and sneakers.
It all was a little ridiculous.
JJ
|