View allAll Photos Tagged Gay Skinhead
I imagine this guy just couldn't take it anymore. He arrived at Mcdonalds at 11:02am, just missing the breakfast menu. He just wanted a Double Sausage & Egg McMuffin, you twats. His ex wife has a restraining order against him and he's just heading to a shop where some skinhead fascist will go on a rant about gay people.
He's had enough.
Probably.
Worked in the garden all day in my Garden Noras, now changing into my Indoor Noras for the evening! Feels GREAT!!
Decided I needed a new look, and these do not disappoint! The leather is unbelievably soft, they fit really well, they look totally amazing and I can't wait for the fourteen hole ones to be ready!!
Photographed at a USO show, Leeds Armouries June 2010.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sideburns
Sideburns, sideboards, or side whiskers are patches of facial hair grown on the sides of the face, extending from the hairline to below the ears. The term sideburns is a 19th-century corruption of the original burnsides, named after American Civil War general Ambrose Burnside, a man known for his unusual facial hairstyle that connected thick sideburns by way of a moustache, but left the chin clean-shaven.
Sideburns can be worn and grown in combination with other styles of facial hair, such as the moustache or goatee, but once they extend from ear to ear via the chin they cease to be sideburns and become a beard, chinstrap beard, or chin curtain. Indigenous men of Mexico, who shaved their heads and wore their sideburns long, as well as Colombians, who wear their sideburns long and typically do not have any other facial hair, are said to be wearing "balcarrotas", rarely seen in modern times, but prized in the sixteenth century as a mark of virile vanity and banned by the colonial authorities in New Spain, occasioning rioting in 1692.
The character Wolverine is usually depicted and portrayed with large sideburns, adding to his tough and aggressive persona. Sideburns gained new connotations in 1960s hippie subculture: the struggle of a New Jersey youth to wear sideburns to his public high school graduation made a newspaper article in 1967 and in the late 1960s and early 1970s among youth subcultures such as hippies and skinheads (usually to the jawline or shorter in the late 1960s). Sideburns also became a symbol of the gay club scenes of San Francisco and Sydney, primarily Lambchops. Because of their multifarious history, sideburns may be seen as stuffily Victorian and ultra-conservative, a sign of rebelliousness, or merely an artifact of current fashion.
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DSC_2740
Decided I needed a new look, and these do not disappoint! The leather is unbelievably soft, they fit really well, they look totally amazing and I can't wait for the fourteen hole ones to be ready!!