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Frédérique
01-13-2013, 03:11 PM
I keep wondering what I read that made me finally introduce myself [on this site] and “take the plunge,” so to say. Maybe somebody said (wrote), “WHEEEEEEEEE…”

Maybe that person was twirling at the time. I can definitely dig it… :clap:

I was watching The Beatle’s Magical Mystery Tour on TV the other day, specifically the last scene in that glorified home movie – you know, the part where the four “lads” descend a staircase together, and then they gradually join a group of colorful dancing men and women. The men were all dressed like straight boards, in tuxedos, tails, cummerbunds, and the like, while the women all featured flounced skirts over equally flounced petticoats. An overhead shot in the movie showed the men standing still, holding the hands of the women, while the ladies twirled round and round. It suddenly hit me – we boys have nothing to twirl, so we (some of us, that is) crossdress!

Males are not allowed to twirl anything. OK, you may see a fanatic twirling a colorful hankie of some sort at a sporting event, in unison with other inebriates, but that’s different. I’m talking about an article of clothing you can twirl while you’re wearing it. A male/boy/man can’t even twirl a scarf around his naked neck these days without seeming to be something less than masculine, can he? All male clothes are somewhat snug to the body, allegedly for freedom of movement during male-related activities, and nothing is ever floating loose, flying free, or existing purely for the sake of superfluous-ness. I don’t know about you, fellow traveler, fellow gender barrier-crosser, but I would really like to TWIRL something now and then...

This is one of the first things I discovered at the dawn of my crossdressing – if I spin around quickly (flounce), my female garment follows me a second later, usually spreading out (and up) nicely by way of centrifugal force. COOL! I never fail to get a thrill from this, simply because it has no equivalent in the world of drab male clothing. Each and every time I dress I spin, or twirl, and I get endless delight from this innocent pleasure. The hemline rises, the air rushes in, and the sensation created has nothing to do with masculinity! Of course, if you prefer petticoats, or the wonderful world of crinoline (an obvious nod to Gothic Lolita – love it), you can twirl AND rustle to your heart’s content! It doesn’t take much to make me happy, does it? Quick – fetch me my pleated skirt, and make it snappy!

Are you like me? Do you like to twirl your skirt or dress around from time to time? :battingeyelashes:

Miriam-J
01-13-2013, 03:19 PM
This is one of the things I love about the longer skirts that I prefer. It's wonderful to feel them wrap around my legs when I turn, or how they drape over my legs when I sit.

Miriam

LaraPeterson
01-13-2013, 03:21 PM
Hi Frederique, (I wish I knew how to put the accents on your name, sorry) as soon as I read your post I was reminded of some guys who DO twirl in their clothes and when they do their "skirts" rise and their white undergarments show [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmzasxarQ80]. You'll get a laugh out of this, I hope.

But more particularly, in our milieu you are absolutely right. I tried to think of something "us guys" wear that twirls or even moves slightly with the wind. I never thought about it but I guess that's why I like pleated skirts, too. I'll never look at a gal in a flowing skirt the same way again. And I'll add a bit more spin to my walk.

Kate Simmons
01-13-2013, 03:45 PM
Oh I twirl my dresses and skirts all right Freddy but what I mostly twirl en femme are my katanas (don't ask). Now those are something definitely worth twirling. ;):)

Leila Be
01-13-2013, 04:01 PM
Maybe that person was twirling at the time. I can definitely dig it… :clap:

" Each and every time I dress I spin, or twirl, and I get endless delight from this innocent pleasure."

You say it all so well but this one line says it best. :)

Eryn
01-13-2013, 04:04 PM
I love clothing and accessories that have some life to them. Skirts, necklaces, earrings, etc. that dance a bit on their own.

I remember reading "A Brief History of Time" where John Wheeler described the observation of black holes as like "...watching women in white dresses dancing with men in black tuxedos within a dimly lit ballroom. You see only the women, but you could predict the existence of their invisible partners because of the women's' spinning and whirling motions...."

I wonder how many of us reading that felt sad because we are "invisible partners."

Monicamaryjay
01-13-2013, 04:18 PM
So true about the need to twirl...that's why I used to twirl napkins, straws at the dinner tables. I think it made somewhat conspicuous, come to think about it.

My hair was probably the very first thing I twirled,... or it could have been my mother's hair, not sure. I noticed as I grew my hair back I was constantly twirling it and I find myself doing the same when I am in a certain frame of mind.

Another great little insight and excellent dicussion... love them.
This is why I stay around here.
Monica

Raychel
01-13-2013, 04:23 PM
It doesn't take much twirling before I am dizzy and falling down.
But I must admit the the flowing of a dress or a skirt is alot more fun then my guy pants any day.

Tibby
01-13-2013, 04:29 PM
My hubby doesn't like the floaty swirling twirly dresses or skirts, he much prefers the "bum hugger" ones as he calls them, though he does like the floaty style tops.

busker
01-13-2013, 04:54 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2013/01/12/world/europe/ap-eu-italy-milan-fashion-week-dolcegabbana.html?hp
A little trouble getting the picture right and there are several more with the article

JustWendy
01-13-2013, 05:56 PM
The very first time I put on a dress, I couldn't wait to spin around - twirling in one direction and then the other. I had dreamt about it for so long and, until that moment, could only imagine what it would feel like. It didn't disappoint. :)

Wendy

YorkshireRose
01-13-2013, 06:04 PM
Hi Frederique, we seem to be in tune on a lot of your posts, especially this one. My most favourite thing to do when dressed is twirl. Don't you also love walking down steps in a floaty skirt or dress? I love how it rises and falls.

Abbygirl
01-13-2013, 06:49 PM
Great post! Many aspects of my dressing involve motion - For reasons mentioned, I have always been drawn to long skirts and dresses but there are other things that I like because of the movement- anklets and bracelets (bangles, yay!), drop earrings, long chunky necklaces, and long hair come to mind. I just love the motion. One, it feels great, and two- dangly, flowing, twirly items tend to remind you they are there - for example, I forget I am wearing things like stud earrings, but a set of 3" hoops? Not likely! Another favorite is going outside on a windy day in a long flowing dress- simply divine!!!

Asche
01-14-2013, 02:20 PM
I got started wearing skirts &c at contra dances.

There's a subculture of men wearing skirts at contra dances.
There's also a common practice of men twirling women, and, to a lesser extent, women twirling men and all other combinations, during dances. Not to mention people twirling on their own. So of course I want my skirts, and especially my contra dancing skirts, to be as twirly as possible.

Unfortunately, most of the skirts that fit me (I'm on the large size, even for women's plus sizes) don't twirl worth anything, so I've been making my own and learning by trial and error how to make skirts with high twirliness. I still haven't achieved my goal of having my skirts fly up to the sky whenever I turn, but even so, I've had some great "twirl duels" with the more fun-loving women at my local dances.

On another, more somber note, I've noticed over the years since I started dancing in a skirt that things have very, very gradually gotten duller. Not just fewer men in skirts (though by now, I'm just about the only one at any of my local dances), but the tone of things has gotten drabber -- duller clothes, less sense of spontaneous fun, as if everyone had gone to too many funerals and were gradually forgetting how to be anything but somber. Sometimes I think the whole country (USA) is starting to feel like District 12 (as shown at the beginning of the Hunger Games movie.)

Ericaxd
01-14-2013, 03:11 PM
Oh my, yes, the feel of the skirt following slightly behind my own movement is divine. Or the way a skirt sways as I walk (strut?) in a pair of heels.

It's a joy that comes early--just watch little girls in dresses and how they love to move in them. It is always enchanting.

TGMarla
01-14-2013, 08:50 PM
Yes, I do. I admit it. I love to twirl my dress. Guilty as charged!

Beverley Sims
01-14-2013, 09:12 PM
I cross dress so as I have something to twirl.
Square dancing skirts and full petticoats seem to fit the bill these days

AmyGaleRT
01-14-2013, 10:28 PM
I included an "action photo" of a twirl in my new pink dress, because it flows so beautifully!

And, whenever my fiancee has me come out and show her what I'm wearing, I give her a little twirl like a model, just to show everything off. :)

- Amy

Persephone
01-15-2013, 01:07 AM
Great post, Frédérique! Very thought provoking!

Yes, sometimes I do a twirl in front of the mirror just to see how it looks. And, like some others here, I do like dangly earrings that move too.

But the best thing I ever got to twirl is me! I was wearing a straight skirt at the time, so not much skirt twirl, but on New Year's Eve I was with a bunch of women friends of mine at a party and was invited to dance by men I did not know. One of them twirled me! Taken completely by surprise, it was not something I was used to, or even really knew how to do, but it sure was fun! And I must have done it at least somewhat O.K. because he twirled me several times!


http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y53/sandylewiscares/2012-12-31232633.jpg

Alas, no pictures of me in motion.

Hugs,
Persephone.