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jasonmitchellemail@gmail.com
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EchelonHunt
Avatar by @hitsukuya
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Nov 17, 2014 22:05:35 GMT 8
November 2014
admin
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Post by EchelonHunt on Oct 5, 2016 22:16:56 GMT 8
What do you mean they don't really fit the shape of your body? Mens plain t-shirts and plain shorts/cargo pants are the best way to present gender-neutral, it's totally comfy too. Plain as in no visible branding or graphics on the t-shirt or pants. I like wearing striped t-shirts too. In fact, I believe the mens plain t-shirts I used to buy were unisex, I dunno, just something about the style and fit that was comfortable. I went with round neck and loose sleeves type. I stayed the heck away from the bicep-hugging sleeves or v-neck style t-shirts as I had a feeling they'd be form-fitting in all the awkward places. I like womens tank tops (unisex style that look like men's, not racer tank style) as they are more form-fitting then mens. Gender neutral collections are awesome but if you are trying out online shopping, try unisex clothing. Here are some gender-queer/gender-neutral clothing resources: androstyle (Resource, full of tips with non-binary people wearing clothing) DapperQ (Resource, Store guide of best places to shop) Finding Masculine Clothes for a female body (I'm not sure if you are AFAB or if you are partial to masculine clothes so please disregard if that's not the case.) More links here on genderqueer clothingHope this helps!
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guest@proboards.com
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Apr 30, 2024 8:27:51 GMT 8
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Post by Deleted on Oct 6, 2016 3:50:07 GMT 8
What do you mean they don't really fit the shape of your body? Mens plain t-shirts and plain shorts/cargo pants are the best way to present gender-neutral, it's totally comfy too. Plain as in no visible branding or graphics on the t-shirt or pants. I like wearing striped t-shirts too. In fact, I believe the mens plain t-shirts I used to buy were unisex, I dunno, just something about the style and fit that was comfortable. I went with round neck and loose sleeves type. I stayed the heck away from the bicep-hugging sleeves or v-neck style t-shirts as I had a feeling they'd be form-fitting in all the awkward places. I like womens tank tops (unisex style that look like men's, not racer tank style) as they are more form-fitting then mens. Gender neutral collections are awesome but if you are trying out online shopping, try unisex clothing. Here are some gender-queer/gender-neutral clothing resources: androstyle (Resource, full of tips with non-binary people wearing clothing) DapperQ (Resource, Store guide of best places to shop) Finding Masculine Clothes for a female body (I'm not sure if you are AFAB or if you are partial to masculine clothes so please disregard if that's not the case.) More links here on genderqueer clothingHope this helps! Thanks a lot! Yeah, I'm in fact AFAB and what I mean about the body shape thing is that I once found this really nice masculine T-shirt, it was like perfectly my size but the shoulder parts were too wide. If that wasn't I'd run after these plain T-shirts, they're nice. UGHH. Most men hate tight clothing. Hell I am MTF and would prefer looser clothes except for jeans and shorts. There are a lot of really skinny men that wear t shirts that the shoulders are too wide and they don't care. If it's comfortable then wear it. So if you are wanting to dress masculine, men don't really pay attention to causal clothing and where the seems are and if it fits perfectly and so on. Most guys I know, usually buy an XL size if the are actually a Large.
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Jan 22, 2024 13:25:05 GMT 8
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Yuki
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Aug 24, 2016 11:03:57 GMT 8
August 2016
violynne
Non-Binary
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Pansexual
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Post by Yuki on Oct 6, 2016 10:02:56 GMT 8
What do you mean they don't really fit the shape of your body? Mens plain t-shirts and plain shorts/cargo pants are the best way to present gender-neutral, it's totally comfy too. Plain as in no visible branding or graphics on the t-shirt or pants. I like wearing striped t-shirts too. In fact, I believe the mens plain t-shirts I used to buy were unisex, I dunno, just something about the style and fit that was comfortable. I went with round neck and loose sleeves type. I stayed the heck away from the bicep-hugging sleeves or v-neck style t-shirts as I had a feeling they'd be form-fitting in all the awkward places. I like womens tank tops (unisex style that look like men's, not racer tank style) as they are more form-fitting then mens. Gender neutral collections are awesome but if you are trying out online shopping, try unisex clothing. Here are some gender-queer/gender-neutral clothing resources: androstyle (Resource, full of tips with non-binary people wearing clothing) DapperQ (Resource, Store guide of best places to shop) Finding Masculine Clothes for a female body (I'm not sure if you are AFAB or if you are partial to masculine clothes so please disregard if that's not the case.) More links here on genderqueer clothingHope this helps! Thanks a lot! Yeah, I'm in fact AFAB and what I mean about the body shape thing is that I once found this really nice masculine T-shirt, it was like perfectly my size but the shoulder parts were too wide. If that wasn't I'd run after these plain T-shirts, they're nice. I'm small too, with small shoulders. And I'm short. But, my hubby is basically the same size as me.. only an inch taller. And even his shoulders are about the same width as mine, and he's a cis male. Yeah it's kinda hard for him to find stuff that fits too, but even if it's a little big somewhere he still wears it and looks handsome in it. The shoulders on my sweater I have feel like they're a little big for me, too, but it doesn't make it look bad. I think you could still wear those things, and look just fine! It just feels weird at first to wear something that's a little more loose up top.. it doesn't mean it's too big, it's just made to fit differently.
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