- Joined
- Feb 5, 2004
I don't watch boy bands except when they are on Sat.NiteLive and they are usually in very unkempt clothing. No problem.
Unkempt seem to be the fashion du jour

What is interesting is you named a few boy bands who do wear ornamental accoutrements (not surprise for you to jump to exceptions)
I have no idea what you mean by the sentence i highlighted in bold :scratch:
In any event you seem to have completely misinterpreted what i wrote - the examples I gave were of high street fashion brands using sequins/crystals in mens fashion, not names of boybands!! (i thought the concept of "boybands" was completely out of favour at the moment and that none really exist at the moment?). I used it simply to highlight that mens fashion has its fair share of sequins/crystals at the moment to point out that men do wear sequins/sparklies, and it isn't just in the context of costumes figure skating or otherwise.
So you seem to agree with the poster who thought ornamental costumes belong in Sports. No?
No. ( I suspect you've probably paraphrased innacurately there anyway).
I don't know why we have to talk about "sport" as a whole. We're (or certainly i'm) not talking about sport as a whole, i'm talking about FIGURE SKATING. The rest of the unjudged sports have no part in this debate because they are sufficiently different to be irrelevant. I think costumes (note the lack of your word "ornamental") definitely belong in figure skating and my opinions as to why are set out all over this thread.
Ant
'cause Italian and Spanish are very similiar. But I've learned today that in Spanish that expression doesn't have just the bad meaning but it can mean in slang also "great".
) and his LP look this past season. In pairs, Ingo Steuer won worlds in black trousers and a black t-shirt, while Mandy wore what looked like a pretty basic summer dress with some flowers. Gordeeva and Grinkov's 1994 LP costumes weren't too ornamented either. Also, IIRC, Phillipe Candeloro went basic black for his Godfather program, at least at Olys. 