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You get there and all the pretty boys look up from drinking from the reservoir and gallop away like gazelle
Like how the corgi keeps checking back to make sure he still has horsy
Coyote found a squeaky toy I accidentally left outside. Turns out coyote love squeaky toys too.
2023
READ THAT STACK OF BOOKS NEXT TO YOUR BED
READ THAT STACK OF BOOKS NEXT TO YOUR BED
READ THAT STACK OF BOOKS NEXT TO YOUR BED
READ THAT STACK OF BOOKS NEXT TO YOUR BED
READ THAT STACK OF BOOKS NEXT TO YOUR BED
Seriously what could happen would be a catastrophe for American Rail and can destroy all the work that has been happening recently to improve amtrak
Fuck you
Brenda!
Hey sorry besties, this isn't true! Brenda ripped off old as fuck designs and repitched them to CK!
The removal of women's wearable pockets happened around 1790, when slim skirt styles were becoming popular. Because the pockets were "the fifth bulge women didn't need" (the other four being breasts and hips) they got nixed, hence the pocketlessness (Rossen, 2021). Before this, women had external bags they wore on a belt beneath their skirt, but apparently large pockets aren't sexy and are also super easy to steal.
Pockets were erased from women's clothing completely in the 19th century due to the rise of handbags and the Greek silhouette, and only started returning around 1840 but this was IMPRACTICAL AS FUCK (Burman & Fennetaux, 2019). These pockets were sewn ON THE BOTTOM HEM and literally no one wanted shitty pockets dragging on the ground.
In WWI and WWII women began wearing pants, and because of war time efforts, women worked in the factories and the only available pants were for men, so pockets became popular once more. But as soon as men returned home in the mid 1940's, women were expected to be feminine and with a pleasing shape. The pocket decline happened towards the 1950's, and it is Christian Dior who first began taking out pockets from women's fashion. He said "men have pockets to keep things in, women for decoration," and thus the faux pocket was introduced (Neustater, 2018).
More info can be found in The Pocket: A Hidden History of Women’s Lives by Barbara Burman and Ariane Fennetaux, happy reading!
























