RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (Full Version)

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mnottertail -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 3:27:16 PM)

If you are injecting fetish clothes into people, you better be using an autoglave and a hella good grinder...........




CreepyStalker -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 5:13:42 PM)

On the forum list this question reads as:
'Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it hard'.

*smutty giggle*
I think it probably does, I'll bet mainstream culture gets off on that kind of thing.




ArizonaBossMan -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 5:16:15 PM)

a girl with face tats? yeah, she's kinky. I'd rather just have em tat BDSM on their foreheads. Easier to spot the freak a zoids.




LadyPact -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 5:50:05 PM)

I don't usually connect kink wear automatically with BDSM.  The fetteratti have been around for some time but unless they actually hit the munch or event zone, they don't hit My radar.




littlewonder -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 5:55:14 PM)

I never looked for "potentially kinky people in the wild" so no it's not confusing for me at all.

Could be I grew up in the 80's when goth and punk was all the rage and it was normal wear for almost everyone I knew. I never saw it as kinky or wild...just normal

I never ever can figure out what people mean when they talk about fetish or kink wear. I mean, what is it? What others call kink/fetish wear I classify as goth or punk.





NocturnalStalker -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/28/2011 7:45:59 PM)

A few years ago before I graduated from subnormal teenager to respectable nobleman I used to be into all of that spiked leather collars and stuff.  Many people assumed I was into some weird stuff.  They were right. 

So believe in your dreams.




xssve -> RE: Does the injection of fetish wear into mainstream culture make it harder to spot kinky people? (4/30/2011 8:17:46 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

You are also missing the fact that fetish wear originally came from the regular culture. The earliest use of corsets that comes to my mind was the Elizabethan stomacher. By the Victorian times it had evolved from outer wear to inner. And now it's moved back to outer wear again in many forms. I don't know if your local museum has a fashion wing, if so, you might find it informative.
True, fetish, as opposed to kink, in many cases revolves around fashion, or particular garments, stockings and hosiery for example, or shoes.

Torn fishnets have been popular for years, as has various bit of lingerie worn where you can see them, both connotative of prostitutes, I think it was Madonna who popularized it and made it a "mainstream" look.

Anyway, since the fetish revolves around the clothing itself, it's technically "fetishwear", and technically, a kink in and of itself - I think the changing definition of kink is possibly the issue here, when things like anal sex are practically taken for granted, now you've gotta become a pincushion, or wrap your balls in barbed wire to be considered "kinky".




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