Have a Gay Christmas!

Dec 22, 2013 12:31

Give each other pajamas this year!


Read more... )

sleepwear, underwear, christmas, christmas ads, gay subtext

Leave a comment

Comments 17

sidlj December 23 2013, 01:30:18 UTC
The owner of Dreamwidth and her wife named their jewelry collection after Faultless Pajamas, having seen a ghost sign on a Baltimore building. http://www.etsy.com/shop/faultlesspajama

Reply


beetle_breath December 23 2013, 01:40:45 UTC
those pjs that first guy is holding look like they're made for someone twice his size!

Reply

write_light December 23 2013, 01:43:18 UTC
He's testing the stretch waist so he can snap them at his "friend". ;)

Reply

pikkewyntjie December 23 2013, 06:19:28 UTC
I imagine him saying, "why, yes, I do believe both of us could fit in these."

Reply

write_light December 23 2013, 06:23:58 UTC
"Do let's try, old chum!"

Reply


kshandra December 23 2013, 02:05:37 UTC
Ha! That second one was written up in a Cracked article I was reading earlier today...

These three fine young specimens are clearly off to their annual Christmas gangbang, and the girl especially seems thrilled at the notion of becoming a human Double Stuf Oreo. Hey, nothing says "Happy Holidays" like dick from both ends.

As crude as that last paragraph is, we honestly can't think of any other circumstances where a lady in a "Sexy Ms Claus" costume winds giggling with two strapping pantsless dudes. Seriously, can you? And don't say they're her brothers because that's much worse.

Reply


tprillahfiction December 23 2013, 02:24:56 UTC
People used to wear pyjama's with belts? (these are advertised as 'belt-less')
how can belts in your jammies be comfy?

Reply


pbrim December 23 2013, 15:59:35 UTC
More like a drawstring, knit or loosely woven for some give, than like a belt for your trousers. The alternative was a fabric waistband that fastened snugly with buttons (less comfortable and tended to lose buttons) or something like a night shirt or union suit that didn't have to be fastened securely at the waist to keep it up. Modern elastics for the waistband have not been around forever you know.

There were some precursors made of natural rubber, but they had their own problems uncomfortable, tended to stick to skin, and didn't last real well. I remember in the late 50's my mom's girdles were made with rubber. The biggest problem I recall hearing about was the inability to handle heat. At the time we were living in Indio, CA where sometimes the temps would stay above 100 degrees, day and night, for days at a time. My mom kept her girdles in the refrigerator, as otherwise they semi melted and stuck to everything in the drawer.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up