I turned an old dress-made-of-t-shirts into basically a half-slip, and it's making a difference in terms of how late in the year I can wear my black skirt-made-from-a-bed-sheet.
Hard-face fleece is fleecey on one side, like standard polar fleece or the sherpa/clumpy thicker stuff, and smooth/water repellant/hopefully cat-fur-and-straw repellant on the other. The hard face also tends to resist abrasion more than standard fleece. So basically it's more useful in my context and can be used as an outer layer; I spend time picking straw out of all my long underwear, sweaters, and various fleece otherwise.
Skirt layers are so great. Especially if you have a heating vent to stand over. I keep teetering on the idea of making up some farm skirts, but the edges would probably get muddier than I want to deal with. The lack of constriction on my legs/thighs comes with such a significant reduction in Weird Pain though.
The only issue I have with layering is static. You're dry enough to have the same issue there, do you have any tricks and tips?
no subject
I turned an old dress-made-of-t-shirts into basically a half-slip, and it's making a difference in terms of how late in the year I can wear my black skirt-made-from-a-bed-sheet.
What is hard-face fleece?
no subject
Skirt layers are so great. Especially if you have a heating vent to stand over. I keep teetering on the idea of making up some farm skirts, but the edges would probably get muddier than I want to deal with. The lack of constriction on my legs/thighs comes with such a significant reduction in Weird Pain though.
The only issue I have with layering is static. You're dry enough to have the same issue there, do you have any tricks and tips?
no subject
And wearing a lot of cotton (which doesn't put an end to the static, but does seem to cut down on the electric shocks).
I hope the hard fleece keeps the straw and other bits and pieces out of the rest of your clothes