Do You Have Your Boardshorts Yet
Even if you are not a surfer yourself you can’t fail to have noticed that surfer fashion has become the standard in modern beach wear. Board shorts, hoodies, flip flops and sandals are everywhere you look in the high street clothing stores.
Board shorts have become all the rage since they first hit the west coast of America in the 60′s. If you remember before then the beach apparel for men and women was not very appealing with limited options including speedos and swimming costumes that came down to you’re your thighs. Board shorts took the world by storm for many reasons, firstly because they were practical beach wear and secondly because they were really funky and cool looking even to the point where even if you weren’t going to the beach you would wear them around town.
Designed and developed by two surfers they made a style of shorts that was perfect for surfing and the beach. They designed board shorts to be practical, to be stylish and to be everything that currently available shorts weren’t. For example, board shorts were designed to be light, even when wet, and they were made to be fast drying. They designed them to be easy to move around in so the shorts didn’t rub you when you were in the water or on your board. Ultimately they designed the perfect, practical pair of shorts.
Board shorts soon caught on. The cool prints, the stylish yet practical design and the hard-wearing materials used made them popular with everyone from Brad Pitt to surfers one on the beach. And this doesn’t stop at men either, Quicksilver picked up on the massive market of the female surfer and developed their own brand of board shorts designed especially for women, you may have heard of it, Roxy. Another immensely popular brand is Animal Clothing with some outstanding board short prints.
Beach and surf wear is now a multi-million pound industry and board shorts are sold all over the world for boys, girls men and women. It’s interesting to think that very few of the people who wear board shorts will ever actually stand on a surfboard.
