Author Topic: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)  (Read 76394 times)

JOhnGw

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #90 on: January 08, 2016, 10:47:18 PM »
I use a lightweight wrap which I can carry clipped in the back of my pochette when nude walking on holiday.

   
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nuduke

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #91 on: January 10, 2016, 10:20:53 PM »
One day I'll pluck up the courage to do a walk in my Kikoy (sarong style wrap, from W africa mainly, very practical garment for hot climes).  It has all the features of the wrap skirts that others wear and very easy to get on with it's simple way of securing, and stays on despite remarkable exertions.  I have witnessed Ian doing his wrap skirt/kilty thing and it's fine but much more of a fiddle than the kikoy which is on in 3-5 seconds!  However, where I have walked and am likely to do in future in the UK, your average passer by would probably ascribe less lunacy and/or sociopathic deviation to a simply nude man than they would to one wearing just a light african print cotton skirt!   However, for the sort of french and spanish holiday locations that JOhn goes to, I suspect my garment would blend in better and look more societally integrated!  It is longer than JOhn's.
John

JOhnGw

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #92 on: January 11, 2016, 11:09:35 AM »
John - I also have two cotton wraps based on the Indian Lunghi - actually cut down from an Indonesian male sarong.


This is the shorter one.

In India they are usually worn over boxer shorts but I, of course, wear nothing underneath it.


There is a short video of putting it on here.

JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries

nuduke

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #93 on: January 17, 2016, 10:35:08 PM »
Yes, JOhn
I guess my Kikoys are Lunghis in India :)
I wrap it with the same technique and as you caption on the video, a couple of folds over is remarkably secure.  I've done quite heavy work in mine without it falling off.  The difference is width.  Mine comes down to the ankle.
John

John P

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #94 on: January 18, 2016, 06:47:45 PM »
It's interesting that in the USA, the word "kikoy" is unknown, and if you search on it, you only find British web sites. What we get here are sarongs, which I suppose results from Pacific rather than African connections. But they're different--commercial sarongs are almost always made of rayon rather than cotton. A catalog might feature a few "cotton sarongs" but that's obviously a minor part of their business.  I think I'd find cotton more comfortable than rayon, and perhaps more durable; I tore a corner off a sarong while walking around a campsite back in September, most likely when I passed by some thorny plants. One has to be aware of loose cloth that hangs down! Another thing is that the rayon can be semi-transparent unless you wear it with a double thickness. That could lead to problems in some places!

Greenbare Woods

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #95 on: January 19, 2016, 03:54:24 PM »
I live in the USA and I've never heard the word "kikoy."   I do own a few sarongs which were imported from India.  I assumed they were made of thin cotton, but I don't really know.  The sarongs I've seen for sale were all at India import shops.
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jbeegoode

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #96 on: January 19, 2016, 07:13:23 PM »
 A website defines kikoy as a wrap, sarong, scarf, throw, pareo. Theirs are 100% cotton, out of Africa. Another states history of them and "so versatile, they can be used as beach towels, towels for the sauna, beach wraps, picnic blankets, scarves, shawls, table cloths, wall hangings, baby wraps, skirts, shorts, bags, dog collar tags and curtains!"

In southeastern India, I see men wear them instead of pants, or over pants, sometimes with tribal patterns and color. They can be rigged in numerous ways. Women can wrap them. I have a video of 68 different ways to wrap a sarong. The same is made from fine wool at times. They may cover the entire body.

But yea, Bob, me, too. Never heard the word until Nuduke used it a few years back. I thought that it was something different.
Jbee
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nuduke

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #97 on: January 25, 2016, 01:03:30 AM »
Indeed, Kikoy was new to me only a very few years ago since I discovered this light, simple cotton garment and read somewhere that it is popular in West Africa particularly.  However, at the time I discovered Kikoys, I was looking for sarongs.  Sarongs - particularly in the far east and Sri lanka seemed to be much larger and more elaborate and longer affairs being tubular and having waistbands and such in some cases and, as Jbee sates, much more options in terms of wrapping them.

John

reubenT

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #98 on: February 14, 2016, 04:16:57 AM »
It's cold outside,  and warm by the stove inside.   Not quite the coldest day of the year,  but it's getting down there where it starts feeling frigid.  (I know,    nothing like the northern states,  but when it keeps going up and down,   and is frequently a damp cold,   it makes the cold feel colder)   So I started cutting fabric for an experiment with the ripoff slapon gym shorts.    Have a couple homemade patterns with cardboard, using the one that made a pair that I'm comfortable with.  Or I should say others are comfortable with, identical to what was pretty standard wear in the 70's.   Except I will not sew together the right side or the short seam at the bottom.   Hem them up with a velcro strip at the waist attachment place,  magnets on one edge and little steel washers on the other side for the hems that I left undone.   That way I can sit on them while running the tractor with the front bunched up on the side.  And when someone comes my way, one slight move just laying the front over will have them on.   Much easier to slap on when working on foot as well,  rather than stepping into it.     Another cold or rainy night and I'll try a kilt style.     That's something a pattern isn't needed for,  just a square piece of cloth the right size.       My patterns I made by laying an old worn out 70's gym shorts that I liked the fit of on the cardboard and drawing the shape of front and back panels, allowing extra for hem.  And plenty extra on the top to wrap around the elastic.          To get the elastic sewed in with the fabric gathered just right,  I cut the elastic band to the right length,    stretch it around my waist to find the size.     Then stretch it out to match the full length of the top edge it needs to be attached to, with the fabric wrapped around it just right,  and sew it together while holding it that way.  That's a little tricky operation but not too hard.        I'll mark it's position in several places with a felt tip pen and do it in segments to make it easier.     I never get it as neat as a factory job, but I don't care.   The lack of neatness shows up on the inside generally.   The one thing I might run into is where the elastic may be prone to pulling the velcro apart,   but we'll see,  if necessary a good sized snap might help it out.      Another potential problem might be the magnets sticking themselves to any metal they get close to,    I may not like the idea after all,   but I'll try it anyway.   

  edit;    Doesn't look like it'll be any good,   I think I'll just use some patches of velcro instead of the magnets.    They want to stick to each other and everything metal too much. 

 edit 2;  Well it sort of works, but don't like velcro either,   too stiff for comfort,  and it takes too much time to match it up, especially the underside.   I got a notion to look for some of those little plastic snap buckles to make easier waist connection.   Can't think of what might work better underneath.  Metal snaps would not be stiff and scratchy,  but still take fiddling time to match up.   I think the kilt would be better using a plastic push together buckle and no under side to deal with.   maybe some metal snaps to finish holding the side split together if desired.  Once the top is fastened it'd be relatively safe for unsuspecting company,  and the snaps could be finished with relative leisure,  one handed perhaps. 

   looks like walmart has the push buckles,  and maybe some of those large jacket/jean brass snaps would be possible to handle one handed, might have to order them.      Those might work ok for the gym shorts,  and maybe a single magnet for the underside in addition,  for easy sticking in "emergency"    if it could be called that.
« Last Edit: February 14, 2016, 02:18:37 PM by reubenT »

John P

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #99 on: February 16, 2016, 03:01:30 AM »
I just ordered one of these skirts, or kilts as they call them:
http://www.smitteez.com/index.php/products/ladies-lacrosse-umpire-skort

I'm not totally enthused by the plain black color, but it has the wrap feature which I think is important. How it will fit on my male physique is a question to be answered, but they're on sale and I thought I'd risk it. I'll report on what it's like.

reubenT

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #100 on: February 17, 2016, 09:48:05 PM »
Black would be hot in open field garden work at certain times.   And the largest is still a size too small for me.

   Looks like I'll be passing by a large walmart store late tonight,  I'll see what they have for quick buckles and large snaps.    Than make me a kilt from this tan mesh.     

reubenT

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #101 on: April 22, 2016, 04:05:04 AM »
Finally got around to making my kilt.  Looks like it'll work just fine.    Has to be somewhat longer than shorts so it doesn't  ride up and reveal too much too easily.    But my mesh is too open.  I will need to add a partial fine mesh liner front and back so back lighting doesn't make the man parts highly visible.    Where it's tight against the skin ya can't tell yer seeing through it since it's pretty much the same color I am.  It'll be so much easier to handle on the tractor seat.  Easy to lay over and fasten when someone approaches.   I've been kind of careless when dragging logs up to the drive,  frequently not stopping to put shorts back on,  just looking through the woods to see if all's clear.   Once I saw the neighbor lady coming as I was pulling up, way off through the trees,   (she drives a toyota RAV4) managed to get off the tractor and had the shorts on before she got close. 

JOhnGw

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #102 on: April 22, 2016, 08:21:14 AM »
There is a discussion on the BN forum about Sauna Kilts, some of which look to be ideal as wraps and an order of magnitude less expensive and lighter in weight that most commercial kilts.
The microfibre ones look rather tempting and I might order one to see how it works.
JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries

eyesup

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #103 on: April 22, 2016, 04:46:13 PM »
By any chance are there links to websites?

Duane

JOhnGw

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Re: Hiking skirt (and other clothes quick to change out of)
« Reply #104 on: April 22, 2016, 07:16:59 PM »
By any chance are there links to websites?

Duane
No usable ones in the discussion but a google search for "sauna kilts" turns up plenty of links, interspersed with wrong links to sauna kits.
JOhn

Do not do unto others as you would that they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
George Bernard Shaw, Maxims for Revolutionaries