Winter Socks

by admin on June 28, 2010

Winter socks are those things you wear on your feet when its wintertime. People started wearing socks for comfort the same as with shoes. I don’t think that anyone in the stone ages wore socks or shoes because they didn’t exist yet. I guess they just tried to stay in caves make a fire and keep warm that way instead, or maybe they just got use to the cold and weren’t wimps like we are today.

I read in a newspaper that people from Yorkshire had thicker skin. This must be why all the women their walk around with miniskirts in the winter. Personally, I think it’s just because they drink so much alcohol that they don’t notice the cold. However, there are many people around the world who are more use to heat.

When I went to turkey on holiday last summer I went shopping in 40° hot weather and full blazing sunshine. I was running from shade to shade, tree to tree and the Turkish people were walking around with trousers and some even coats with no problem looking at me and giving me the weird look. The look that says, what the hell is that idiot doing.

I would like to see them come to Switzerland in the winter without winter socks and give them the same look and give them a taste of their own medicine. Apart from that occasion it was the best holiday I ever had, you could do anything you want, jet ski, para-glide, swimming in the sea and go out and have the best time ever in all the bars and clubs.

When I get older I don’t want to live in a place where they need winter socks because I want to live in a nice warm hot place where you can just have fun and enjoy all the beautiful ladies wearing their nice bikinis sunbathing on the beach with a nice cold beer.

Anyway, this blog is about winter socks not summer holidays which would be a more interesting subject to talk about any day. The socks for the winter are basically just like any other socks, you put them on your feet for comfort, the only deference is that they are warmer than any other socks you can buy and they make your feet sweaty and smelly, so if you are not in a really cold place and really need them I would recommend you don’t wear them unless you don’t care about smelly and sweaty feet.

Winter Socks

Winter Socks

You can buy these socks in any shop that sells them. normally the kind of shop that sells clothes or maybe winter sports wear. The best option would be to go to your grandmother and ask her to nit some for you because all your friends have winter socks knitted by their grandmothers and she will most likely do it because all grandmothers want to be the best grandmother in the world.

Further information can be found a t British Gas Energy Smart .

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Some cool Warm feet winter images:

I’m glad I wore all of this stuff to keep me warm … but I think I may have forgotten something when I left the apartment…
Warm feet winter

Image by Ed Yourdon
This woman was standing at the southwest corner of Broadway and 96th Street…

Note: this photo was published as an illustration in an undated (Dec 2009) Squidoo blog titled "Leggings, Tights, Thigh Highs, Hosiery." It was also published in an undated (Jul 2010) blog titled "Footless Tights & Leggings ?A Fashion Staple for any Fashionista!"

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Months from now, if people stumble onto this set of Flickr photos, they won’t know or care when the photos were actually taken. After all, rain is a fairly universal phenomenon, and it can happen in any of the four seasons of the year.

Still, it’s an odd experience to be writing these notes a week after the photographs were taken — at an altitude of 35,000 feet, on a flight to Miami that lifted off from JFK airport just as the first snow flurries hit the runway at the beginning of what promises to be the first major snowfall of the 2009 season. Twelve inches of snow are expected by the time the storm stops, which makes this collection of water-soaked individuals seem like they got stuck in the wrong place and the wrong time.

But a week ago, the temperature was about ten degrees warmer — and what could easily have been a foot or two of snow was instead just a couple of inches of cold rain. Rain, of course, brings out the umbrellas; and on a couple of earlier occasions this year (which you can see here and here on Flickr), I began to see that — notwithstanding the typical stories about New York fashions — people were not restricting themselves to black raincoats and black umbrellas. My winter coat (courtesy of North Face) is black, and just about every umbrella I’ve ever owned has been black; my suitcases are black, my backpacks and briefcases have always been black, and even my camera bag is black. Since it’s promising to be a cold winter, I just bought a new pair of gloves and a new woolen cap … in black.

But that’s apparently not true for many other New Yorkers. While you’ll see a few black outfits in the photos collected here, the range of vivid colors continues to surprise me. Somehow, it’s something you would expect to see at the beginning of the spring season — signifying the rejection of the dark gloom of clouds and rain, and celebrating the imminent arrival of flowers and blossoms, of emerald-colored trees and thick green grass and the chirping of birds. But this collection of photos was taken in mid-December, only a week before the official beginning of winter. You’d think that people would be carrying black umbrellas and somber raincoats that marked the season of death and darkness, but I guess that’s just not the way things are here in New York City.

On the previous occasions when I’ve photographed umbrellas in the rain, I’ve deliberately used a "pocket camera," albeit a fairly sophisticated one such as the Canon G-10. I wanted something that would be compact enough that I could stick into my jacket pocket if the rain got heavy, and I didn’t want to risk damaging the electronic components a really expensive, sophisticated camera by getting it wet. The results were usually fairly good, but I always wondered if I could do a better job with one of my high-end DSLR cameras…

… so that’s what I used for this collection of photos: my Nikon D700 camera, with a big, heavy 70-300mm zoom lens. I attached a lens hood to the lens, to minimize the chances of raindrops falling directly onto the lens itself; and I stood beneath the awning and overhang of various storefronts and buildings along Broadway as the rain poured down steadily all around me. Next time, I might be even more adventurous, since I’ve got a professional waterproof bag-thingy that should keep the camera dry even if I’m standing out in the middle of a torrential downpour. But for now, this was a good start.

Because of the rain, most of the people I photographed paid no attention to me at all; they were too busy concentrating on where they were walking, where the puddles were deepest, and whose umbrellas were about to poke them in the face. On the rare occasions when they did see a crazy guy standing under an awning, pointing a camera in their general direction, they frowned or gave me a quizzical look, and just kept going…

So that’s the way it was, on this rainy Sunday afternoon. At this point, I’m going to assume that winter has officially arrived, and that the precipitation during the next few months will take the form of snow, not rain. I don’t know how well it will turn out, but one of my future projects will be a series of photos during a blizzard. Stay tuned … and in the meantime, stay dry.

Fisherman Scarf in Porridge
Warm feet winter

Image by the second fiddle
This is one of our new items on Etsy. It’s 8 feet long!

Receding Snowline
Warm feet winter

Image by mtsofan
Last weekend’s rain, and the warmer weather of the last two days, have diminished the amount of snow on the ground. Hooray!

Yesterday, we took a drive to lower elevations and actually saw people jogging in shorts.

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22. Flammulina

Image by Kahis
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Image by net_efekt
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