Reindeer Boobs

Reindeer Boobs




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Reindeer Boobs
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Have you ever looked at an ugly Christmas sweater and thought, That sure could use a NSFW adjustment? Well, you're in luck. Christmas is only three weeks away, which means you can start marking your calendars with traditional Yuletide parties. This year, though, try one-upping your friends and family (OK, maybe not family) with not an uglier Christmas sweater but with a much freer boob.
That's right, you heard me — the hottest new Christmas trend , according to The Sun , is the "reindeer boob." Described as a "bold take" on the ugly sweater trend, reindeer boob entails cutting a hole in your sweater to allow for the flaunting of a boob of your choice and then putting googly eyes, antlers, and a red nose on said boob so it resembles a reindeer. Hey, why not?
Like all trends that should not exist and nevertheless somehow do, reindeer boobs originated on Instagram. It is unclear who started the trend, but if you track #reindeerboob on Instagram, there are literally dozens of Christmas observers who have decided to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ by having one breast cosplay as Rudolph. The traditionalists seem to adhere to the hole-in-ugly-sweater reindeer boob, while the more budget-friendly partakers are using one-shoulder tops pulled down on the side. For another (less) bold holiday trend, you could also try the popular and easy white eyeshadow look that is taking over Instagram.
While only 48 posts pop up when you search #reindeerboob, this trend is apparently popular enough to spawn its own merch. As The Sun reports, one enterprising Etsy-er named YourSassyGrandma (sassy grandma, indeed ) was at one point selling a sweater with a precut boob hole and that came with a reindeer-nose pastie, googly eyes, and sewn-on antlers. The sweater, inexplicably, is sold out.
In my opinion, one good thing about this trend is that it's rather adorable on any willing participant, regardless of gender identity, shape, and size. If you gaze into the abyss that is #reindeerboob, you'll be able to see reindeer-adorned chests of all genders and sizes. After all, what's the point of a goofy Instagram trend if everyone can't participate?
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This Holiday Season, Reindeer Boobs Are Here To Wish You A Merry Christmas And A Nippy New Year





The State University of New York at Stony Brook





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Learning to embrace my afro and the products it needs


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What better time to #FreeTheNipple and celebrate body positivity than the most wonderful time of the year?
Ugly Christmas sweaters have come a long way over the past few years. Whereas in high school I had to buy a regular old sweater from the mall and do it up myself (ornaments and all), Target now has its very own line of festive fleece just waiting to be grabbed up.
But still, aren't those a little overdone? Doesn't everyone have a red sweater with the word "Namasleigh" and Santa in a tree pose underneath it? Aren't you looking for something a little more original?
If you're late to the party like I am, this is the first you've heard of the new holiday trend known as reindeer boobs — a trend in which, in the desperate hunt for a unique holiday sweater for your next company Christmas party, those with boobs are cutting a hole in one of their sweaters and popping a titty out to decorate like a reindeer. Boom, it's Christmas.
Easy enough, right? Throw on some googly eyes, a pompom, and a pair of felt ears (plus however much glitter and bells your heart desires) and you'll be the most festive one at the party.
What better time to #FreeTheNipple and celebrate body positivity than the most wonderful time of the year? If Halloween can bring with it glitter pumpkin butts , then Christmas deserves an NSFW trend of its own. And the best part? While it may be a little taboo, Rudolph's red nose is square on the nipple, the exact part of the female breast that we (for some reason) have an issue with on social media.
Yeah, you heard that right. You can post your reindeer boobs all over Instagram and no one can say a thing about it.
From the bottom of my heart (and boobs), Merry Christmas.
When black people with afros grow up, we are taught to feel ashamed of our hair. For me, no one specifically said that my hair was unflattering, but everyone implied it. My friends would ask me why my hair didn’t look like theirs. Strangers would approach me and touch my hair before introducing themselves, assuming my hair was soft only to find an unmanaged, crunchy mess that they trapped their fingers in uninvited.
When I was in elementary school, I lived with my father — who is white — and he didn’t know how to take care of his own hair, let alone mine. So I often showed up to school with the top of my head as horizontally flat as a table. It was a regular occurrence for me to be called into the principal’s office because the adults at my school assumed things weren’t well at home, with only my tragic hair as proof.

While there were not many people around me with afros outside of my family, there were even less people with afros in the television shows and movies I turned to for entertainment. There are more white people represented in the media than black people, especially black people with afros. Whether it was blonde, black, brown or red, all of my media influences had silky hair that most often flowed to a long, breezy length, a length that my hair has never achieved without extensions. From what I remember, the people in the media that did have afros were black but were usually shown as destitute, ratchet antagonists to the protagonist with flowing, magnificent locks.

But whether or not people of my race — mulatto — had afros in the few times they were shown in the media, I learned everything I once knew about taking care of my hair from my mother. I’ve lived with my mother — who is black — since I was 13. While my hair had come a long way from the tabletop style of my elementary days, my hair was still crunchy, short and falling out because she didn’t know how to take care of her own afro. Though she had grown up in a different generation, my mom’s media influences were the same as mine. And she grew up with parents that also didn’t know how to take care of their hair.

For the majority of my life, I’ve lived with crunchy, short, dry afro hair that broke off easily the more I tried to style it. I’ve relaxed , straightened and picked my hair. I had grown up learning to do everything that’s wrong for my hair because I was told that these things would take care of it, or at least make it look similar to the fashion icons we had in the media, who were mostly white with silky, long hair.

Relaxing your hair is when you put chemicals in it that immediately give your scalp, forehead and neckline the sensation of knives piercing through your skin to try and puncture your skull. It’s a contemporary torture device intended to make curly — or in my case, crunchy — hair easier to straighten, and it’s something I’ve been subjected to many times throughout my 19 years.
I feel my story reflects that of many black and mulatto women with afros. It’s the lifelong struggle of discovering how to care for our thick hair, and then the journey to embracing our afro head. My journey has been short in comparison to some women, but it has been no less difficult.

In fact, in my senior year of high school, I got into the habit of shaving my hair off. There was still hair all over my head, but it was extremely short and much easier to brush. My hair wasn’t breaking off anymore because there wasn’t enough length for it to break off. While it gave me a very androgynous look, my hair was finally the soft afro that I had worked my entire life to achieve.

The last time I shaved my head was the day before I flew out to Vermont for college. I had the intention of shaving my hair this final time and taking care of it while at school so that it would grow to a length where I could relax and straighten it again. But when I got to Vermont, I couldn’t find any hair products that were intended for afros, so I relied on Suave and other name-brand hair products that promise to get rid of moisture.

Then I met a friend who I’ll call Amber. Amber is half-black and half-white like myself, although her parents are the reverse race to mine, so her mother is white and her father is black. She grew up relying on her mother to teach her how to take care of her hair. And because her mother is white, she knew about as much about how to take care of Amber’s hair as my mother knew how to take care of mine.

Growing up, Amber endured the same struggle I did. But somewhere along the way, she learned that she had been doing all the wrong things to her hair. While products such as Suave and Garnier are usually intended to get rid of moisture, which is a common problem I hear my white friends discussing, people with afros are supposed to lock in moisture because our hair naturally lacks it. Amber eventually discovered such products as Shea Moisture and the ORS Olive Oil lines that are marketed for black and mulatto individuals to maintain our hairstyles, whether that be afro, weave, or any other hairstyle black men and women choose to rock.

Amber and I met in January 2016. One of the first things we talked about — as is normal for most black and mulatto women — was our hair. She asked me what products I used, and at the time I was using Suave. She started laughing at me. After her outburst of giggles subsided she explained to me how Suave takes out moisture and our hair needs to keep it in. She directed me toward the brands I’ve discussed above. She also informed me that our college’s bookstore was bringing in an entire section that was dedicated to people with hair like ours. One side of the cosmetics display would have the products that I was so used to putting in my hair, and another section would have products that would actually help my hair.

When this display was put in, I was extremely happy, and so was every black and mulatto person I talked to about the display at my school. Here was finally a place in Vermont I could purchase products that would make my hair thick, strong, soft and long — everything I’d always wanted my hair to be but could never achieve.

(I did an interview with Dr. Rosalynne Whitaker-Heck who initiated the process of getting these products in the bookstore. You can watch that interview here . It begins 2:22 into the video).
Since then, the bookstore has expanded the display and has added many more products and brands for us to purchase, and my hair has never looked and felt better. My hair is much longer than it has ever been, though it still does not pass my shoulders. It is incredibly thick, which I love, it is softer than any fabric a blanket can be made from, and it is stronger than I could have ever hoped it would be.

Media influences and many of the people surrounding me are still mostly white, so I’m routinely bombarded with pressures to make my hair as long, as thin and as silky as the women I see on Netflix or YouTube. But the other day I was putting the Shea Moisture Curl Enhancing Smoothie into my hair and running my fingers through it, and it was the first time that I was proud of my hair. Although it’s been a lifelong struggle and continues to be one, my hair has made me more conscious of advertisements, and has caused me to form strong bonds with other women of my race and hair type.

The struggle continues, but I’ve finally learned to embrace my afro hair, and that’s a gift I wish for all black and mulatto children and adults still struggling to find the products that work for them.

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Reindeer Boobs Are The Christmas Trend You Never Knew You Needed



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By Matilda Welch




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I’ve seen lots of crazy holiday trends over the years, but this one just might take the cake. The creation of Utah entrepreneur and mom of three Sheri Wiseman, reindeer boobs are here to take your Christmas sweater game to a whole new NSFW level.
Scroll down to read more about Sheri’s designs and find out where you can get yours. Believe me, you’ll want to!
1. It’s exactly what it sounds like. Sheri, who runs the Etsy shop YourSassyGrandma , is selling amazing sweaters with a hole cut out of one of the boobs along with some googly eyes, a garland wreath, and a little red nose to create the reindeer boobs look.
2. You’d have to be pretty comfortable with your body. While your nipple is covered up by the red garland nose, it takes a confident woman (or man!) to bare your body in this way. I don’t know if I’d be confident enough to wear it, but I kinda wish I was!
3. Imagine wearing reindeer boobs to your next Christmas party! This probably isn’t the right outfit for your office gathering, but going to a friend’s dinner party or surprising your partner after work with this would be sure to elicit plenty of laughs and it wouldn’t soon be forgotten.
4. Sheri has other sweaters too. And they’re not just for women! Men can get in on the reindeer action to, though the animal is in… a slightly different place. Reindeer junk ? Thankfully, that look doesn’t require guys to bare any of their nether regions, though it is certainly suggestive!
5. Yes, they’re intentionally ugly. Sheri’s designs are a play on the ugly Christmas sweater trend, only taken to a new, naughty level that’s lots of fun. These sweaters aren’t supposed to be beautiful or intricate, they’re meant to be clunky, a bit gaudy, and a bit shocking, and she’s definitely succeeded in all of these areas. More than anything else, they’re meant to be a lot of fun, and that’s exactly what they are.
6. Christmas is coming, so get your orders in now! Sheri is taking orders for all of her designs via her Etsy site at the moment, so show reindeer boobs (or any of her other hilarious sweaters) some love this holiday season, eh?

Matilda Welch
Matilda is a Jersey girl born and raised who can't seem to leave the armpit of America behind. She loves writing almost as much as she loves dogs.

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It's time to free the holiday nipple
Because we live in the internet age, someone decided to level up the traditional ugly Christmas sweater by cutting a hole in it and letting just a single boob hang out . Seriously, nobody is making this up. It’s a real trend with tons of mentions on Instagram . And today we're bringing it to you — just in case your holiday season wasn't starting off right .
Here’s how it works: A person looking to partake in the trend finds an ugly sweater , cuts a hole into the chest area and pulls a boob through . They then cover t
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