International Talk Like a Pirate Day: Pirates and Fashion
Publicado el 19 September, 2017
Arrr! Today, as every September 19th since 1995, we celebrate International Talk Like a Pirate Day. A day when we all can (and should) express ourselves as if we were authentic buccaneers, a day when phrases like “Landlubber,” “Bring that bottle of rum,” or “All hands to starboard” will become the main pieces of our vocabulary. That’s why, at Waixo, we’ve decided to approach the pirate world from a different perspective: its foray into the world of fashion. Has pirate aesthetics influenced our clothes? Perhaps the prints we wear? And the fabrics? We analyze it all in this post.
PIRATE AND SAILOR-INSPIRED PRINTS
The sea and those who sail it in their ships have brought us prints that we frequently see on our journeys: anchors, white and blue stripes, parrots, skulls, or islands and palm trees. Don’t believe it? Here are some examples, scallywag.


GARMENTS THAT REMIND US OF PIRATES
Let’s board a ship and make ’em walk the plank. But before that, let’s see some of the pirate clothing and accessories we still wear today: headscarves, shirts with laces and ruffles, pirate trousers and baggy trousers, or musketeer-style boots. Not to mention the pirate attire we don for carnivals.

BUT HOW DID REAL PIRATES DRESS?
Pirates primarily thought of battle and their voyages at sea, so they wore comfortable, not-too-tight clothing even when raiding a ship full of jewels and silk garments. Furthermore, we can say that the hook, the eye patch, and the peg leg are accessories for cripples that were actually little used by pirates, as they hindered movement in a fight, so, although they were used, they were not as common as cinematography has led us to believe.









