Do Some Women Actually Dress Their Men As Women?
Every so often, someone will ask, usually in a hushed voice, as though they’re requesting classified government documents, “Do women actually dress their husbands or boyfriends as women?”
The short answer is yes.
The longer answer is yes, but probably not in the way movies, television or internet folklore imagine it.
Popular culture tends to portray the phenomenon in extremes. Either the woman is a cartoonishly domineering “mistress” barking orders while her trembling husband totters around in six-inch heels or she’s a glamorous makeover fairy who transforms an eager man into the feminine ideal with the wave of a mascara wand.
Real life is usually much more ordinary. And much funnier. Because in many cases, it starts not with coercion, but curiosity.
A wife notices her husband lingering a little too long in the hosiery aisle at Macy’s. A girlfriend jokingly says, “You know, you have better legs than I do.” A husband admits he once tried on a skirt in college. Somebody laughs. Somebody experiments. And before long, there’s a middle-aged accountant standing nervously in the bedroom asking whether the beige pumps or the black pumps look “more appropriate for brunch.”
Civilization advances in mysterious ways.
What’s often overlooked is that many women approach the whole thing pragmatically. Men tend to imagine crossdressing as some dramatic transformation worthy of a movie montage. Women frequently see it as… getting dressed. Which means they immediately begin correcting mistakes.
“No, not that shade of lipstick.”
“That skirt is too short for daytime.”
“You can’t wear open-toe shoes with those stockings.”
“Sit down properly.”
In other words, the average crossdressing husband often discovers the same thing generations of teenage girls learned from their mothers: femininity comes with rules. Lots of rules.
One reason some women become enthusiastic participants is that they enjoy the shared activity itself. Shopping together, discussing clothes, experimenting with presentation, laughing at fashion disasters; these things can become oddly bonding experiences. What begins as “Can I try this on?” evolves into Saturday afternoons browsing sales racks and debating whether a navy skirt suit is more versatile than charcoal gray.
And honestly, many women appear to enjoy the role reversal just a little. After centuries of men pretending not to understand women’s fashion, some wives finally get to say, “Now you know what it’s like.”
There’s poetic justice in watching a man discover that:
- women’s sizing makes no sense,
- heels are instruments of medieval engineering,
- shapewear is a branch of applied physics,
- and carrying a handbag somehow requires an advanced degree in logistics.
The educational value alone is substantial.
Of course, not every woman approves. Some are uncomfortable with it. Some tolerate it politely. Some absolutely hate the idea. Human beings vary. Relationships vary. Reality rarely conforms to internet mythology.
But yes, there are women who actively encourage it. Some even take charge of it.
There are wives who buy clothes for their husbands. Wives who teach makeup. Wives who insist he coordinate accessories properly before leaving the house. Wives who become unexpectedly invested in whether “that shade really complements your complexion.”
And somewhere in America right now, there is undoubtedly a man standing under unforgiving department-store lighting while his wife says, “You are not buying another black skirt.”
That man probably thought crossdressing would be glamorous. Instead, he accidentally acquired a stylist. Which, when you think about it, may be the most realistic outcome of all.
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| Wearing Shein |
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| Leon femulates Seka Aleksić on Serbian television’s Your Face Sounds Familiar. |







Stana - another ‘spot on article’. well done 💋💋 Althoug( it’s not my wife who is ‘my stylist but her Mother i recognize a lot of what you say in her - certainly the shared shopping experience. she is forever buying new outfits, shoes & underwear & the experience of browsing through rack after rack in department stores & dress shops with her is a real high. she has taught me how to pu5 together her outfits when i dress & needless to say she echoes her style on me. as i have alluded to there is another aspect to our telationship that comes through my dressing that i’m not sure happens in similar relationships. Guess i am lucky in that respect.
ReplyDeleteSo true! My SO isn't thrilled with my dressing but does tolerate it. She often makes "suggestions" that I should wear a different top or perhaps do my hair (wig) differently. I do ask her for help picking out the appropriate accessories and she willingly dips into her own jewelry box to find the right item. I'm very fortunate. JJ
ReplyDeleteAnother insightful article, Sweetie. Keep 'em coming!
ReplyDeleteI had a gf right after college that would let me help her put together work outfits for the upcoming week. Naturally I always included pantyhose when she wore a skirt or dress. She once offhandedly said that, since I like pantyhose so much, I should wear them myself. That led to us wearing them together a few times, but unfortunately the relationship ended before additional womenswear got added to my wardrobe. I often think about how that situation would have turned out if the universe had kept us together...
ReplyDeleteI've written a check for a size medium, nude Figure Perfect Shapewear (plus S+H) but I need the address of where I should send my request🤣 Such a fabulous ad!
ReplyDelete“ Civilization advances in mysterious ways.”
ReplyDeleteBut what if it is not advancement?
This is probably a right bit more common than many realize. It was actually my wife that encouraged this at first, and we were almost the same size. Trouble began when I dropped a few sizes and she didn’t though, lol.
ReplyDeleteA lot of this makes sense though as women have been wearing men’s stuff for years and much of female fashion is borrowed from former men’s wear. Heels, tights, tunics…..all men’s wear at one time.
Today women sport styles such as “boyfriend jeans” and many regularly borrow from a chap in their life.
Perhaps the day will come when the men’s section will carry “The Girlfriend Jean” ……or not. I’m not sure male egos could handle this as a whole.
Norah
Forget girlfriend jeans. I want to wear girlfriend sweaters or girlfriend sleepwear. Something that will be like a soft loving hug from her when I have it on:)
DeleteWhen I revealed my secret to my wife of two years, I told her everything. Which was: That when I was seven I'd been forced to dress up as a girl to appear in a summer day camp play. That on the day of the show an adult male staff member touched me under my dress. It was a devastatingly humiliating experience which left me ashamed and I worried that anyone who knew that about me would forever deem me not worthy to be a real boy.
ReplyDeleteShe expressed support and outrage that the whole event occurred. I went on to confess that as a teen, in secret, I'd dress myself up as a girl. When I went on to say that as grown man I sometimes dressed up in women's clothes I had a deep fear she'd leave me.
My wife said that she loved me and supported me, but if I wanted to put on women's clothes she wanted no part of it and that my desire to crossdress was not part of our marriage commitment to each other. Or, to put it simply she hadn't signed on for that.
She said that she'd give me space if I wanted to dress up, but she didn't want it to interfere in our family's lives at all. I agreed and forty two years later we still have a loving marriage.
Occasionally, I dress up. It's not what I might have wished for, but , honestly I don't know what I'd wish for if a wish were available because I might just wish that crossdressing was erased from my life.
If a man has a willing partner that's great. I'll try not to be too jealous, but how many of us have that level of support?
I find it interesting that those womanless beauty pageants and womanless weddings that were so commonplace in many areas of our nation have almost completely vanished. Were they killed by a backlash against "Drag Queen" story hours and MAGA?
Best,
Emily
I believe they were killed by the woke who saw it as making fun of transgendered. I noticed that a couple years ago the phrase "womanless beauty pageant" was no longer a searchable header on Pinterest. I believe that was for the same reason.
DeleteOne year my work supervisor dressed her husband in one of her high school prom dresses for Halloween. The women of the office were giddy and wanted to see pictures. I knew the husband and he was about the wife's height and stature. There was no doubt in my mind they wore the same size women's dresses. Reading comments posted by wives on various forums I often query myself why do these women not feel threatened in some way when their husbands femulate, while others exhibit outright hostility.
ReplyDelete