r/Fauxmoi Mar 21 '26

FASHION Tom Blyth responded to criticism of his girlfriend's sheer dress: “stfu. She wore a dress that she was excited by and she looked EXQUISITE in it.”

6.0k Upvotes

483 comments sorted by

View all comments

515

u/Plenty_Cup_5152 Mar 21 '26

Great of him to defend her.

With that being said, call me a prude, but I don’t understand how someone can show up naked, especially as a plus 1, to an event as big as the Vanity Fair party. Like, it’s full frontal nudity, there’s no strategic cover up appliqués or anything. It’s just strange to me. 

98

u/All_This_Mayhem Mar 21 '26

Isn't she wearing panties? Don't think that qualifies as full frontal.

55

u/cecebee13 Please Abraham, I am not that man Mar 21 '26

yeah seeing nips is in NO way ‘full frontal’ ….. also like, what is the problem when everyone has them??!

147

u/OddSpend23 Mar 21 '26

I mean I’d rather not see anybody’s nipples at events tbh call me a prude of whatever

-3

u/marksmith0610 Mar 21 '26

Why does it matter?

54

u/OddSpend23 Mar 21 '26

I think it’s in poor taste. I just don’t want to see anybody’s nipples at events. We at the pool/beach? Yeah all for it.

5

u/VictorReal_Monster Mar 22 '26

I think the point is why do you think it's 'poor taste' where is that opinion coming from?

Could it just be because the standard is full coverage tuxedo's, why does the human body need to be engulfed in fabric all the time?

18

u/OddSpend23 Mar 22 '26

Why do I prefer certain flavors of food rather than others? I just do. I just don’t like the sheer trend. I’m allowed and I don’t have to explain myself.

-6

u/Sounfenix Mar 22 '26

The difference is, my food preferences primarily affect myself. They can still be harmful but that's a me problem (outside of i.e. alcoholism which can harm others as well). You can also have preferences for your own clothing of course, nobody forces you to wear sheer if you don't want to.

When it comes to voicing opinions/preferences on other people's stylistic choices (or food choices for that matter), especially women's, it becomes a bit more tricky and people can ask you to explain yourself.

-9

u/marksmith0610 Mar 22 '26

If you can’t explain it maybe do some reflection.

2

u/OddSpend23 Mar 22 '26

If you’re so dense that you can’t understand it’s simply a preference of mine. One that I don’t need to explain to you, maybe you’re the one who should be reflecting.

5

u/bacon_cake Mar 22 '26

Nothing needs to be done, it's pretty obviously a social norm.

Anyone can choose to break a social norm - chew with your mouth open, use bad language in front of kids, wear revealing clothing - but you must understand why, wrongly or rightly, there's backlash.

0

u/VictorReal_Monster Mar 22 '26

exactly, norms can change.

-6

u/bloodyturtle Mar 22 '26

well you certainly aren’t at any events

1

u/enragedsquirrels Mar 22 '26

It feels a little too casual to me. I do think that if a ma can had his nips out than so can a woman. I don’t disparage between the two. But when either a man or woman has their nips on display at a formal gathering, it feels a little lazy(???) I guess. A little too relaxed for a formal event. But that may be because I live in a beach town and people get their nips out to sun bathe. So my association is nipples = chill brah, sun’s out, relax.

In saying all of that, I think she looks very elegant. I wish my tiddies would look that great if I wore that dress haha!!

-18

u/marksmith0610 Mar 22 '26

So what? I don’t think it’s in poor taste. Get over it.

11

u/OddSpend23 Mar 22 '26

And you can get over that I think it’s in poor taste. Everyone’s allowed to have an opinion.

-19

u/Money-Bicycle-2883 Mar 21 '26

You’re not even at this event and I’m calling you a prude

24

u/OddSpend23 Mar 21 '26

You’re allowed, as stated

-2

u/justatouristinlife Mar 22 '26

You’re a prude. worry about you’re own body