A willy warmer (or cock sock ) is a new men's outfit designed to fit the penis.
Video Willy warmer
Histori
According to Croatian knight Radmila Kus, the knitwear is traditionally worn by Croats, especially in the mountainous region of Mrkopalj, as a guard against frostbite. Such clothing is also worn in Norway, where they are called forhyse , vÃÆ'Ã|nakot , or suspensorium . Some examples are kept in the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History. Sometimes in Norway they will be made of squirrels with feather sides in them, to wear under leather pants in winter. In the Faroe Islands such clothing is called "kallvÃÆ'øttur" (male bitten) or "purrivÃÆ'øttur" (testis bitten). There is a tradition in Norway and Denmark, especially in the Faroe Islands, where a girl will present her boyfriend to see how seriously she takes their relationship. If the prize is rejected, it is seen as evidence that he is not ready to marry.
Maps Willy warmer
In modern culture
Since the 20th century, warmer warmers are usually created as novelties and joke gifts rather than to serve functional purposes. In 1939, while filming Gone with the Wind, Clark Gable received a hand-knitted hand crockery gift from Carole Lombard. In the 1950s Joan Crawford knitted "chicken socks" as a parting gift for Porfirio Rubirosa.
Dawn Steel, while working as a merchandiser for Penthouse in the early 1970s, found a hand-knitted hocked sock in Frankfurt, and then got the right to market the "extra large" versions of red, blue and white. through magazines. In the early 1980s, the Blackpool seaside resort had warm warmers displayed beside other items in souvenir shops outside Pleasure Beach, where they were seen as reflecting the limitations of sexually suggestive material that were considered allowed to be displayed publicly. It was claimed in 1991 that Charles, the Prince of Wales, received one warm green Christmas knit, which was kept with another unusual gift in the basement at Highgrove House.
In naked male photography, as published in magazines like Playgirl , chicken socks have become a cute substitute for fig leaves, deliberately concentrating on hidden areas. In 1990-1, during the Gulf War, the British tabloid newspaper The Sun printed a pattern for stronger warming, which prompted female readers to knit and send to soldiers in the Gulf. Early 21st century willy warmers are often made to represent religious or political themes, or in animal form. For example, in 2004 Ann Summers offered a horse head design with a braying speaker. British reality show star Bobby-Cole Norris has repeatedly made headlines for his choice as a swim warmer, including a simple pocket and precise anatomical variations.
See also
- Codpiece
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia