I've never been to a salon, so can only try to imagine what the female customers in the waiting room think. Is there any preference in dress style for such a visit?
One male on this site says he wears a very long shirt and nothing else.
Being such a personal process, anyone in the waxing waiting room may let their imagination (aka fantasies) run amuck. But let us be real; everyone is there for about the same reason, regardless whether it's for waxing the eyebrows or around 'Uranus'. What happens in the privacy suite may be fodder for some sexual rumination, and the furtive sounds emanating from that closed, inner room might even increase the prurient intrigue of the other hairy patrons. I say let the mind wander all you like, it's all for a good cause - the enjoyment of enhancing how we look to others and feel about ourselves when it's over.
I cannot see why how one dresses when leaving home for a visit to their waxer should cause much if any concern. Is this a question of ease of access for the professional doing the denuding, or more to the matter of dressing to be impressing the other customers/waxing staff? Clothes don't make the (wo)man - an easily-removable garment seems prudent but not very important in such a place and time, though tight-fitting clothes over freshly-defrocked skin seems ill-advised. Keep it loose until recovery has been got. Waxers see it all, so don't get yourself all a-froth worrying about their sensibilities when you're getting that bothersome cloth out of their way.
We've recently added a monthly waxing offering at our resort but it has yet to take hold, knowing that the sensitivity of some body parts to sauna and hot tub usage following the procedure make it less attractive to a nudist who is only visiting. I'm hoping that when the winter months are behind us, more customers will be interested in taking in this service.I've never been to a salon, so can only try to imagine what the female customers in the waiting room think. Is there any preference in dress style for such a visit?
by wildwillyI cannot see why how one dresses when leaving home for a visit to their waxer should cause much if any concern. Is
Fair enough. Perhaps the women customers may just feel it's 'their' domain regardless of the services the business actually offers. The salon I occasionally walk past on a lunchtime walk has opaque windows to head height so I have no idea what goes on there. I've always been 100% DIY. :-)
Yep, that would be me!! I like wearing as little as possible. In the warm months, I wear a tshirt (sleeveless most of the time, and when it gets cold, I wear something long sleeve.One male on this site says he wears a very long shirt and nothing else.
I wear as little as possible, i.e. shirt and shoes only. (See my comment above for pics. It does indeed make it easy. The girl who does mine is used to it. She doesnt have to wait for me to get undressed. Most of the time I have my shirt off almost before Im in the room.I've never been to a salon, so can only try to imagine what the female customers in the waiting room think. Is there any preference in dress style for such a visit?
Yep, that would be me!! I like wearing as little as possible. In the warm months, I wear a tshirt (sleeveless most of the time, and when it gets cold, I wear something long sleeve.One male on this site says he wears a very long shirt and nothing else.
Don't your legs get cold when wear just a hoodie?
Correct. The pic wearing the sleeveless shirt shows one of several shirts I will wear. Some are longer than others and not quite as risky. That pick is as short as I would dare attempt.So you only wear a shirt with nothing underneath in warmer weather?