Marc Chevalier
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Max Flash said:One of the reasons that I very rarely post on internet forums these days is that few people can accept an opposing point of view to their own. Instead, people expect to be able to post (and in many cases ask for opinions) and then get incensed when others take a contrary view to their own. It seems we are all expected to fawn all over each other.
cecil said:Little girls are forever being dressed up for special occasions, ...
cecil said:True, but we're talking baby photos, not politics!
I think he looks darling. Little girls are forever being dressed up for special occasions, it's nice to see a little boy in something just as fancy
mt_spiffy said:My then 2 year old daughter had a pretty new Easter dress last year, so how is it any different to buy a young son a suit?
mt_spiffy said:
GBR said:Seems somewhat gross to dress a child of this age in this way.
Tomasso said:Why would anyone comment to the opposite?
GBR said:Seems somewhat gross to dress a child of this age in this way.
Marc Chevalier said:There are suits, and then there are suits. Back in the 'teens, '20s and '30s, newborn baby boys wore gowns or "dresses" that were very similar to those worn by baby girls. They were (literally) dressy, comfortable, and easy to put on and take off. Baby boys never wore suits and ties, and when they were of age to wear dressy "boyish" apparel (at around 1-year old old), the outfit of choice for decades was the sailor suit. Again, more comfortable than a "business suit", and without a tie constricting the baby's neck.
Yup. When I was little (<1yr) and was taken to church, I was installed into a long dress-like thing. In fact, the christening gown that all the babies in my family have been baptised in dates back to my great, great, great grandfather's christening which occurred in the 1860's.
Later, I did wear the sailor's suit to church, a white one for summer and a navy one in the winter, although after the first lengthy sermon in said suits, the whistle on its lanyard was removed and never returned to me.
Later, I had little business suits to wear on Sundays (from about the age of 4 or so?), which was great, but never did make up for the chocolate brown, corduroy leisure suit that I was forced into occasionally during the week. This latter attrocity resulted in permanent scarring that still has not faded to this day....
de Stokesay