skirts, NEFFA was the place to be this past weekend.
(Apr. 21-23.)
NEFFA, for those of you so out of touch as to not already
know

which runs an annual festival of dancing and music-making,
mostly in the traditional styles of New England and the
British Isles, which takes over nearly every available
square inch of the high school in Natick, Massachussetts
(near Boston, MA, USA) See http://www.neffa.org for
details.
One of the main activities is contra-dancing, which is an
ancestor of square dancing (but simpler, so you don't have
to take a 12-week course to be allowed to dance.)
(See http://www.sbcds.org/contradance/whatis/) Now,
when 400+ people are filling up a high-school gym swinging,
twirling, reeling, circling, etc., for 12 hours straight
to lively reels and jigs, the hall gets hot and so do they.
And men have discovered (like a lot of ladies have) that
a loose skirt is cooler (in many senses) to dance in than
long pants or even shorts. And a long, full skirt adds
something to the experience of those extra twirls you put
into a dos-a-dos ("dosie doe" for the square dancers.)
There must have been at least a thousand or so people
there, and I'd guess maybe 100 men (and boys) were wearing
skirts. If you're looking for a place where men in skirts
are accepted, this is a good one.
There were all kinds of skirts: one fellow took a bunch of
neckties and sewed them together. A lot had tie-died or
india-print gauze skirts. Tiered skirts were popular, too.
I saw 3 or 4 utilikilts, a few tartan kilts, and at least
one pleated tartan skirt, basically a kilt with a lot less
wool than a "real" kilt. One friend of mine (older than
me) was saying how she came in to find her husband dancing
in a skirt -- it was hot, he'd failed to bring his shorts,
so he went to one of the vendors and bought a skirt!
Anyway, I spent the whole weekend in my "contra" skirts.
Friday night, I arrived about 1/2 hour before it ended
for the day, but got in a dance or two. I wore my long
(35") yellow skirt, which really sticks out when I spin.
It was a bit warm, even though it was late and chilly out.
Even spinning (to open up the skirt and to create a breeze)
didn't help.
We had to park 2 miles away and take shuttle busses
(yellow school busses), and when climbing up the steps
I was reminded of the down-side of long skirts -- I kept
stepping on the hem. The skirt has some lace connecting
some of the tiers, and I was afraid it would rip one off,
but it held. Conclusion: 35" is not really practical.
The next day I wore a shorter (30") blue skirt. It has an
elastic waistband, and I have decided that this doesn't
work: when the skirt flares out and drags on the next
dancer, it tends to pull the skirt down. I think I need to
break down and put in a drawstring. I did some dancing,
and when I got tired, I got out my guitar and joined
in with some musicians who were "jamming" around a piano
someone had left in the hall. Fortunately, my wrong chords
weren't too loud (well, the odd *right* chord wasn't too
audible, either), so they didn't tell me to go away.
On Sunday, I wore a 33" denim tiered skirt from
Wal-Mart, the only skirt I didn't make myself (but I
did add a pocket, which I regard as an absolute must.)
I don't like it as much as the others, because it's too
close-fitting around my hips and butt for a flared skirt
-- I think the combination of fitted down to your crotch
and then sticking out below that tends to emphasize
my overly-ample middle.
I tried wearing this with a "body-suit"
([url]http://www.bodysuit.com)[/url], but the crotch strap gets soaked
from the sweat. I switched to a T-shirt later in the day.
That day, one woman asked me why she sees so many men in
skirts. I trotted out my usual reasons -- less confining,
cooler, and "I just feel like it." She wondered if we
would be in any danger if we walked around town like that.
I stuck to my opinion that the world is already not all
*that* safe, so wearing a skirt isn't likely to make it
all that much less so, but she seemed genuinely concerned
that if, say, her son were to walk around in a skirt, he
would get beaten up.
I decided to be daring and wear the outfit for my drive
home. I ended up standing outside my car for about
15 minutes at the gas pump holding the nozzle (world's
slowest gas pump!), and the only reaction I got was one
teen-age boy who walked past and then came back to look
again (a sort of "is that what I thought it was"? look)
and then went off to pay for his gas. And when I got home,
even though I'm not ready to deal with everyone in my
town knowing I wear skirts, I tried unloading the car
in my skirt. Again, one person saw me, but
Observations:
For dancing, at least, I wear a (home-made) petticoat
plus a slip, and the skirts I make also have linings.
This helps give the wonderful feeling of you going one
way and your clothes going another when you twirl and
then stop. Oddly enough, the extra layers don't seem to
make things any hotter (perhaps because I use light-weight
nylon and sheer polyester.) Shorter would help, though
-- I'm about 2/3 of the way through making a 25" skirt.
(Very full, of course, like all my contra-dancing skirts.)
I have to say, most of the guys wearing skirts didn't seem
to have much sense of what they looked like. For example,
I think a too-small T-shirt with a beer slogan on it just
doesn't go with a flowered India-print skirt.
Actually, even the guys wearing pants or shorts at most
contra dances don't seem to dress to look nice.
Some men (like me) like to dress up a little, at least
to the level of "business casual". A dance is, after all,
a social event, not an hour of pumping iron at the gym.
But some guys wear shorts, running shoes, and sleeveless
T-shirts, which for those of us over 30 (or 40!) tends
to emphasize our waistlines, armpits, hairy arms, etc.
-- AMM