Pictures of gay men in lingerie
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“It affects my posture, plus I don’t feel as guilty going on that run later.” “It gives me that little boost of confidence,” he said. Last month, for example, on The Wendy Williams Show, actor Jason Biggs reluctantly admitted to wearing Spanx. While shapewear, like lingerie, is considered a bit embarrassing for men, it also exposes a very human side of men’s dressing. The optics look good for a progressive company like SKIMS to make a move into men’s shapewear (Spanx and Under Armour already make it), but it also makes financial sense – WWD reports that the global shapewear market could be worth $6.4bn by 2024. In November, Kim Kardashian hinted that her shapewear line SKIMS Solutionwear could soon incorporate a men’s line. The men’s undergarment industry is morphing, too, not only through brands such as Moot but also through shapewear. Messaging about diversity and inclusion has replaced those about body type homogeneity as promoted by brands such as Victoria’s Secret. Thanks to companies like Rihanna’s Savage X Fenty, the lingerie business as a whole is detaching from the narrowly defined ideas about who a lingerie customer is and what they should look like. Why not?” Wearing Spanx gives me that little boost of confidence – it affects my posture, plus I don't feel as guilty going on that run later Jason Biggs, actor It’s great to see more options open up to people. Parker says: “It’s about offering people more choice, the fabric and the design that will make you feel fabulous. “I don’t think men will start to wear the same sort of lingerie as women, but I think there’s scope for men’s undergarments to become a little sexier, a little skimpier and a whole lot more interesting.” “I think, as brands like Gucci take more of a gender-bending approach to fashion, we will see more lingerie on the catwalk,” says Zak Maoui, junior style editor at British GQ. On the catwalk, French designer Ludovic de Saint Sernin has made undergarments into outerwear (he has featured leather briefs and male bras at his shows), while Rick Owens and Thom Browne have experimented with codpieces and skirt-short undergarments. You can pierce your skin, tattoo yourself or shave your head, but don’t mess with men’s underwear.”Īs contentious as the launch of Moot might be for some, it comes at a time when fashion’s notions about gender are more fluid. “Men have not had this option before, it’s not been considered acceptable to want to decorate yourself with this particular material,” he says.
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Parker acknowledges that the idea of “lingerie for men” is a controversial one. To begin the process, he says that he “couldn’t just take the shapes and sizes of boxer shorts and convert them. He says that, when designing the pieces, he “wanted to keep the language of typical lingerie but tailor it to fit the male form”. On the Moot site there are a number of envelope-pushing designs, from the Parisian (frilly knickers but sculptured for a man) to the Stardust (a thong with heritage lace pouch).
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“Women have a myriad shops or online outlets to find any kind of underwear they could wish for but the only items of lingerie made for men were cheap, tacky, novelty stuff.” “If I wanted anything more beautiful than daggy old boxer shorts there was nowhere to go, even online,” Parker explains.