MrsSpringsteen
Blue Crack Addict
I know, who cares.. but at least it's something different to discuss
I don't think I've ever worn PJ pants in public as much as I'd love to. And thinking about wearing footy PJs in public ("And some young people also have told her they plan to wear the one-piece, footed PJs to school".), well that seems a bit odd unless you're 1-3 years old
http://www.cnn.com/2005/EDUCATION/09/22/pjs.public.ap/index.html
"Public pajama-wearing grew out of college students' long-standing habit of rolling out of bed and into class. Now pajamas are a fashion statement, with such retailers as Old Navy, Target and J.C. Penney offering myriad styles for adults, teens and preteens.
The trend isn't popular with everyone, though. School officials from Houston County, Georgia, to Katy, Texas, to Southfield, Michigan, to Bakersfield, California, have banned pajama-wearing at school.
And even some under-30s think it's inappropriate to wear them anywhere but home.
"It isn't a matter of being too casual," says Olga Shmuklyer, a 28-year-old New Yorker who readily acknowledges to being a member of the "flip-flop" generation. She simply thinks pajamas aren't flattering, for anyone. "They look like vagrants," says Shmuklyer, whose own college-age sister wears pajamas in public, much to her "dismay."
I don't think I've ever worn PJ pants in public as much as I'd love to. And thinking about wearing footy PJs in public ("And some young people also have told her they plan to wear the one-piece, footed PJs to school".), well that seems a bit odd unless you're 1-3 years old
http://www.cnn.com/2005/EDUCATION/09/22/pjs.public.ap/index.html
"Public pajama-wearing grew out of college students' long-standing habit of rolling out of bed and into class. Now pajamas are a fashion statement, with such retailers as Old Navy, Target and J.C. Penney offering myriad styles for adults, teens and preteens.
The trend isn't popular with everyone, though. School officials from Houston County, Georgia, to Katy, Texas, to Southfield, Michigan, to Bakersfield, California, have banned pajama-wearing at school.
And even some under-30s think it's inappropriate to wear them anywhere but home.
"It isn't a matter of being too casual," says Olga Shmuklyer, a 28-year-old New Yorker who readily acknowledges to being a member of the "flip-flop" generation. She simply thinks pajamas aren't flattering, for anyone. "They look like vagrants," says Shmuklyer, whose own college-age sister wears pajamas in public, much to her "dismay."