*sniffle* I never realized all that I was missing... I thought I just liked solid colors that were easier to match, and I didn't care for messages, so much, and I generally found a t-shirt with a saying on it didn't go as well with the skirt I was usually wearing, or the jeans I was dressing up a bit... but I was so wrong! I accidentally stumbled across a whole different universe, where in people must actually talk to me if they'd like to know my opinions. How did I go so wrong?
Glory ,'The Killer In Me'
Natter 32 Flavors and Then Some
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Yeah, I can't deal with clothing with words on it, outside the house. I can barely deal with pictures, even, but I am sometimes willing to wear my Wonder Woman tank top.
I have a t-shirt on that I picked up in Pittsburgh at the Phipps Conservatory. It has a picture of a lovely gnarled tree and proclaims "I am not dead, I'm dormant," it is my favorite tee.
I'd feel bad if my PDA got lost and Colin's phone number ended up in the hands of someone who actually knew who he was and wanted to use the number nefariously. However he has more fame to gain before that's a problem, so no worries.
There are a couple other numbers on there that should really not get out -- sadly, my parents accidentally sent a blank text message to one of them while they had borrowed my phone.
Many of my shirts have writing. Most of them say Krav Maga, unsurprisingly.
I can't deal with clothing with words on it, outside the house.
Same here. (when I was a kid, i drove my mom nuts with a "no words on my clothes" edict.)
Plus, t-shirts that say things and come in my size are usually cut for men, and those look really wrong with my body type -- too big through the shoulders and tight on the hips, with an unflattering neckline. I know unisex t-shirts are supposed to fit everyone, but that is not my experience.
but I am sometimes willing to wear my Wonder Woman tank top.
Does this have her picture and/or logo text, or does it actually use the design of Wonder Woman's uniform?
Plus, t-shirts that say things and come in my size are usually cut for men, and those look really wrong with my body type -- too big through the shoulders and tight on the hips, with an unflattering neckline.
Yeah, I hear that. At least, all the shirts I have that say things are cut way wrong and are too big, anyway.
Does this have her picture and/or logo text, or does it actually use the design of Wonder Woman's uniform?
It's a photo of Lynda Carter as WW. But I really want the Underoos too.
My absolutely favourite tee has writing on it. Pink tees are okay. A pink tee that says GET IN TOUCH WITH YOUR FEMININE SIDE on the front and SOME THINGS NEED A WOMAN'S TOUCH on the back? Coolest ever.
I think the only shirt I have that I do very rarely wear outside of sleep that has something on it, is a blue tank top with a picture of Buffy and Angel on it, that was a surprise present from my friends, in 11th grade. And I think I half wore it because it was so thoughtful of them, and half wore it because of Buffy and Angel. But that's the only one I can come up with, and even that one I very rarely wear outside of my house now, because the laser screening on it is not what it once was.
All my tees are plain--I now feel deprived.
Oh, and completely off topic, an interesting Newsweek article on Broadway plays having their pre-Broadway tryouts in Chicago--they mention a show I saw in previews in Skokie, "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown," with Andy Rapp, BD Wong, and Kristin Chenowerth.