Clothing : Dressed

The subject of clothing encompasses the entire range of garments worn on the human body for warmth, adornment, protection against the elements, and modesty. (Humans have also dressed up non-human animals for a variety of reasons.)

Clothing is an important aspect of appearance.

There are dress codes on certain social occasions and for certain jobs. Schools may require school uniforms; if plain clothes are allowed there may be restrictions (see for example [1] (http://www.madison.k12.ky.us/mm/School%20Information/mms_dress_code.htm) ). A doorman or -woman of an entertainment facility such as a disco or nightclub[?] may judge visitor's clothing and refuse entrance in the case of disapproval.

Clothing may be oversized; conventionally this means too large, but it may also be intentional for reasons of fashion or personal preference.

See also:

Common clothing materials:

Rarer clothing materials:

  • Wood and metal are sometimes used as clothing materials, for example in clogs or protective clothing, and in fasteners and stiffeners. Bone has also been used as a clothing material.

Clothing production methods:

Some clothing is specialised equipment for a special purpose, such as a diving suit (these are included in the list below).

Some clothing materials are fetishized by some people, perhaps on the basis that the material forms a "second skin" that acts as a fetishistic surrogate for the wearer's own skin. The most common forms of this are spandex fetishism and rubber fetishism, in which the fabric is both stretchy and shiny, exaggerating some of the aspects of human skin. Another form is transvestic fetishism.

Types of clothing

Styles[?]

Part of the surface of clothes may be made retroreflective (small parts of coats, large parts of special high-visibility clothing for rescue workers etc.). This way they become much more visible in the dark for observers near a light source, such as the driver of a car with its headlights on. The pattern of the retroreflecting parts also helps to distinguish between objects and people.

For greater visibilty at daytime, as well as for decoration, very bright colors are obtained with fluorescence.

The opposite are clothes with a camouflage pattern.

Classes of garments

See also:


Fictional clothes



Common misspelling and questions (FAQ)

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The most primitive wood against each other till they ignite; and we have seen that this need-fire, and that most probably it was formerly resorted to at all that the need-fire, or other sacred fire, should be made by the prescribed, whether among Celts, Germans, or Slavs, that wood regularly kindled by the friction of oak-wood, we may infer that fact, it appears that the perpetual fire of Vesta at Rome was fed perpetual fire which burned under the sacred oak at the great the fuel burned in the midsummer fires may perhaps be inferred from districts of Germany, of making up the cottage fire on Midsummer Day smoulders slowly and is not finally reduced to charcoal till the the old log are removed to make room for the new one, and are mixed to guard the food cooked on the hearth from witchcraft, to preserve keep them from blight and vermin. Thus the custom is almost exactly England, Serbia, and other Slavonic lands was commonly of oak-wood. ceremonies the ancient Aryans both kindled and fed the fire with.

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Licence of article: GNU FDL.
Original source @ wikipedia.