Aperitif
Meme bar
- Location
- ...I don't have much idea - really.
We need a 'post a lycra about the poster above' thread then



Speicher said:In the same programme, (Emma) the men also seem to walk like men. I was going to mention this a few weeks ago, when the series first started, but thought it might create the wrong impression.
Now that Arch has started this thread, can I add that the men stride along purposefully and with gusto. Rather than some men who today seem to dawdle along in a very casual manner.
In order to keep Arch and myself happy, which two men are going to learn how to ride a horse? Note I said "men" not "boys".
Arch said:Am I the only person here to have an historic costume fetish?
Dayvo said:No, definitely not.
I'm quite partial to this, one of the oldest outfits going:
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Arch said:She suggested an aerial pic of the site in question, or maybe a nice one of a fox.
Guess which picture they used...
dellzeqq said:Regency trousers are slim in the leg, but voluminous in the belly. Hence the folds of cloth running northwest and northeast from Mr. Wise's (ahem) groin.
Flat stomachs, like those of Mr. Wise, would have been very much the exception at the time - remember Cobbett's description of the perfect breakfast - four pounds of bacon with not a scrap of lean, washed down by four pints of bear. The regency trouser was a means of showing off a man's principal asset - his gut.
Arch said:I think it's to do with the boots. I think you have to stride, in boots. I felt the same in my jodhpurs and half-chaps*.
Auntie Helen said:They weren't all fat, Dell. Some were whizzing about on horses, indulging a spot of fencing or boxing, etc etc.
I'm with Arch - I like a Regency chap (as long as he doesn't have syphilis); I like that they spent a bit of time on looking smart. And it helps if they have a great stately home with servants to do all the dull cleaning etc.