I hated this scarf a few days ago! *high five*. I was wondering if this was the scarf you were referring to. I would have known what you meant if you said the terrorist scarf.
I tried to wrap my scarf around my neck like the hipsters. I couldn't figure it out. I don't have hipster-scarf-wrapping skills. Super pissed about that. I wear scarfs in Denver b/c out of necessity during the winter/spring months.
None taken! And oddly enough, I actually think I bought mine in 2005.... If you want, I can give you a piece of construction paper to strategically hold up while you're talking to me when I'm wearing one.
oh man... keffiyahs are *so* 1991, but you know what? I love them! They're really soft, warm in winter, too. (but I can't wear them where I now live without people assuming that I'm a terrorist sympathizer, and no, I'm not joking!)
I've recycled my older keffiyahs by using them as protective wrapping for my Arabic tambourines. (Again, not joking.)
"The 'keffiyah' (vars. 'kaffiye', 'qaffiyah', 'keffiyeh,' 'jeffbrijehs') was popularized across Western America in 1957 after the release of Lucille Ball's first film, 'The Raging Red of the Red Sea', causing department stores to be flooded with requests for the scarf traditionally used in old Araby to ward off evil spirits, Jews, Christians, Jewish Christians, other unclassifiable shiksas & shaygetzes, and sand.
"Ever since it's fade from the public sphere in 1967 (after an unfortunate use of the scarf in a Nancy Davis Reagan film entitled, 'Thar She Blows'), the keffiyah has only rarely reached the heights of popularity that it did in the late 1950s. It has gained modest resurgence in certain communities in Brooklyn, Seattle, and Omaha by people who must have a general ignorance of their complete uselessness as fashion forward placards and an acceptance of their knee-scraping propensity to inhale bowls of dong."
20 comments:
THANK YOU.
File under: things I both own and love.
I, too, despise the hipster scarf.
I hated this scarf a few days ago! *high five*. I was wondering if this was the scarf you were referring to. I would have known what you meant if you said the terrorist scarf.
They're not even the rage anymore. It's like the faux-hawk--go away!!
They're so 2005. No offense, Lauren!
I LOVE THIS BLOG!
Let's take aim on skinny jeans next. (mainly because I don't look good in them)
I tried to wrap my scarf around my neck like the hipsters. I couldn't figure it out. I don't have hipster-scarf-wrapping skills. Super pissed about that. I wear scarfs in Denver b/c out of necessity during the winter/spring months.
Second on the terrorist scarf. That's what my friend Tbone mockingly refers to them as.
None taken! And oddly enough, I actually think I bought mine in 2005.... If you want, I can give you a piece of construction paper to strategically hold up while you're talking to me when I'm wearing one.
oh man... keffiyahs are *so* 1991, but you know what? I love them! They're really soft, warm in winter, too. (but I can't wear them where I now live without people assuming that I'm a terrorist sympathizer, and no, I'm not joking!)
I've recycled my older keffiyahs by using them as protective wrapping for my Arabic tambourines. (Again, not joking.)
All y'all are wrong.
From Wikipedia:
"The 'keffiyah' (vars. 'kaffiye', 'qaffiyah', 'keffiyeh,' 'jeffbrijehs') was popularized across Western America in 1957 after the release of Lucille Ball's first film, 'The Raging Red of the Red Sea', causing department stores to be flooded with requests for the scarf traditionally used in old Araby to ward off evil spirits, Jews, Christians, Jewish Christians, other unclassifiable shiksas & shaygetzes, and sand.
"Ever since it's fade from the public sphere in 1967 (after an unfortunate use of the scarf in a Nancy Davis Reagan film entitled, 'Thar She Blows'), the keffiyah has only rarely reached the heights of popularity that it did in the late 1950s. It has gained modest resurgence in certain communities in Brooklyn, Seattle, and Omaha by people who must have a general ignorance of their complete uselessness as fashion forward placards and an acceptance of their knee-scraping propensity to inhale bowls of dong."
SO THERE!
You're as bored at work as I am, Jason.
AM NOT.
...
Am, too.
Bulk plaid scarves wholesale in stock & Custom plaid scarf manufacturing service. https://wholesalesocksbulk.com/wholesale/custom-plaid-mens-scarf/
learn this here now dolabuy hermes find this dior dolabuy visit the website dolabuy ysl
our website dig this this hyperlink click for more info Check Out Your URL YOURURL.com
Post a Comment