[quote]sluicy wrote:
imhungry wrote:
sluicy wrote:
imhungry wrote:
sluicy wrote:
imhungry wrote:
iamthewolf wrote:
imhungry wrote:
iamthewolf wrote:
i’m actually kind of surprised that this is generating this kind of response now. haven’t people noticed that this has been almost the standard, editorial male model for the better part of a decade? Dior Homme started this look in 2000, hell YSL was starting to lean this way with Rive Gauche Homme as far back as '97.
That could be because I don’t think most guys follow what the standards are in male modeling.
you don’t really have to. you could just read a magazine or watch a commercial on tv.
Do you honestly think that the average guy would be able to reply with:
“i’m actually kind of surprised that this is generating this kind of response now. haven’t people noticed that this has been almost the standard, editorial male model for the better part of a decade? Dior Homme started this look in 2000, hell YSL was starting to lean this way with Rive Gauche Homme as far back as '97.”?
Really?
Or girl. But particularly in a crowd like this. I was wondering earlier how many people notice the way clothes hang over the way people’s bodies are proportioned, as though the clothing were an entity themselves. It seems awfully sick to think that clothing is so important that you would starve yourself into nonexistence in order to highlight what you are wearing, but I agree that that is how the fashion world works. I think it’s an ironically visible subculture though, because in reality most clothing is chosen to obscure flaws in too-large bodies.
Bah, I’m drinking so I don’t know if this makes any sense. Anyway who cares, I like muscles. runs off to TILF
You make sense, Sluicy.
Clothes can hide flaws and/or eccentuate the persons physical strong points.
smells whisky
Thank you, I shall call you again. hiccup
But really, who notices a person’s clothes before they notice how the person is built? Like, “Wow, hawt tunic… wait… wait… Oh, she’s a total fatty!”
See, if she was totally skinny, you’d just notice her tunic. Or, the tunic should have been black with horizontal stripes.
But speaking as a woman I prefer to see men whose muscles I would notice before I noticed anything else (so that example was probably bad).
And if a chick is thin enough that you only see clothing, I notice that too. Lingering body image issues and all. [/quote]
Sure, especially if the clothing fit well and it was form fitting without being too tight.
The women models are built like little boys. Yuck. Teeny-tiny asses look HORRIBLE on women.