alexseanchai: Katsuki Yuuri wearing a blue jacket and his glasses and holding a poodle, in front of the asexual pride flag with a rainbow heart inset. (Default)
let me hear your voice tonight ([personal profile] alexseanchai) wrote2013-05-09 05:52 pm

(no subject)

Read this post, explore the linked website, and bug their owners. [personal profile] zarhooie's complaint is that a lot of We Love Fine's geeky T-shirts don't acknowledge the existence of don't have versions cut to fit the female[-assigned-at-birth] geek, something about licensing, I don't pretend to understand, and Kat would appreciate it if we all expressed to them our desire for T-shirts cut to accommodate breasts.

I do not have money for that Korra shirt. I do not have money for that Korra shirt. I do not...
myaibou: (DP fangirl)

[personal profile] myaibou 2013-05-09 11:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's just a question of recognizing that there are lots of different body types and style preferences. For those of us who aren't very curvy, clothes cut specifically for women actually helps us look like, you know, women. Put me in a men's t-shirt and you can't tell I have any shape at all, so I avoid t-shirts cut for men if I can at all help it because I do like to look feminine.

Her Universe is a great site that caters specifically to girl geeks. It started as a Star Wars store (the founder is the voice actress for the Clone Wars cartoon character Asoka), but has been gradually expanding to other fandoms. She started it specifically as a response to this kind of thing, geeky sites that sell nothing for women.

Now, they've had their issues with recognizing bodies come in different shapes, too, not so much because they don't recognize girls can be geeks, too, since that's their specific mission, but with making clothes for women who aren't slender. But they're pretty responsive to suggestions. My more curvy geek friends have had good response when they've complained that just making a shirt bigger doesn't mean it will work for a bigger woman, and Ashley's been really trying to make changes along those lines as well.

If I had money for all the geeky clothes I wanted, that's probably where I'd spend it.

ETA: Also, they have this instead of this.
Edited 2013-05-09 23:21 (UTC)
tptigger: (Default)

[personal profile] tptigger 2013-05-09 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, the Marvel women vs men shirts are ridiculous. I think the real problem is that mass produced clothes are hard to fit people who aren't mass produced to spec.
Sorry if this was overly cranky, I think my massive hatred of "girly tees" just gets the better of me sometimes.
Though if you want to hear me rant about sexist merchandising, get me started about the mix of Power Ranger action figures sent to stores....
myaibou: (DP fangirl)

[personal profile] myaibou 2013-05-10 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, no worries. Everyone has different tastes, and that's cool. I tend to not like girly styles (pink and cutesy) but like girl cuts. I remember how excited I was when I saw a girls' cut Avengers shirt that was a strip from the comics -- at Penneys, no less! No pastels. No cutesy art style. Just straight out of the pages of the comic. It was like, okay, someone gets it, that girls can be feminine and still like superheroes without making them cutesy. That's what pisses me off about only offering men's cut shirts, because it's like the default assumption is geek stuff is only for guys or for girls who want to dress like guys, that femininity and superheroes or sci fi are mutually exclusive. If that look isn't your thing, more power to you.
tptigger: (Default)

[personal profile] tptigger 2013-05-09 11:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Ask them for adult sizes! If you'd but it, they should know there!s a market or it.
zarhooie: Girl on a blueberry bramble looking happy. Text: Kat (Default)

[personal profile] zarhooie 2013-05-10 08:45 pm (UTC)(link)
iirc ThinkGeek has a self-rescuing princess shirt! I have it, actually.