Baron Kurtz
I'll Lock Up
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I'm sure most people's first idea is the picture of David Beckham from the late 1990s. But the mens sarong is the basic clothing for an astonishing number of men in southeast Asia.
My first visit to Malaysia, I went "native" (of course, the few remaining native Malaysians are held in isolation camps, so this is actualy a story of going "Indonesian"). I was captured by the comfort and design of the Indonesian men's sarong that is essentially ubiquitous in the Bali-derived populous of Malaysia (and Thailand, Burma, and of course in Indonesia. I've never been to Vietnam, but I believe it's quite common up there too). I bought a pile of them and they're pretty much all I wear around the house.
A plain cotton tube in various designs and patterns, the Indonesian men's sarong is the perfect garment for hot humid climates and perfectly combined with sandals or flip flops and a loose fitting lightweight shirt.
I get enough abuse from my neighbours just for wearing sarongs around the yacht that I don't have the guts to wear it in public here in HK, or in the UK. Should I ever end up in non-Chinese Tropical southeast Asia, however, the sarong will undoubtedly become my everyday clothing.
bk
My first visit to Malaysia, I went "native" (of course, the few remaining native Malaysians are held in isolation camps, so this is actualy a story of going "Indonesian"). I was captured by the comfort and design of the Indonesian men's sarong that is essentially ubiquitous in the Bali-derived populous of Malaysia (and Thailand, Burma, and of course in Indonesia. I've never been to Vietnam, but I believe it's quite common up there too). I bought a pile of them and they're pretty much all I wear around the house.
A plain cotton tube in various designs and patterns, the Indonesian men's sarong is the perfect garment for hot humid climates and perfectly combined with sandals or flip flops and a loose fitting lightweight shirt.
I get enough abuse from my neighbours just for wearing sarongs around the yacht that I don't have the guts to wear it in public here in HK, or in the UK. Should I ever end up in non-Chinese Tropical southeast Asia, however, the sarong will undoubtedly become my everyday clothing.
bk