Anonymous wrote:Good ole 90s dragging your pillowcases around town, no parents snapping your photos or walkng with you. Miss those days!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody has old pillowcases? Wow. We keep them even if the sheets are not good anymore. Among other things, in case of fire you pop your cat in one and flee. No looking for a carrier or leash and they can't claw out ot it easily.
I have actually practiced fire emergency protocols with my parrot. With a pillowcase, because she hates her carrier (pillowcase first, then shove into carrier). But unless it's an emergency, it's best to always use objects as intended. If you don't it makes you look - how can I say this politely - poorly educated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody has old pillowcases? Wow. We keep them even if the sheets are not good anymore. Among other things, in case of fire you pop your cat in one and flee. No looking for a carrier or leash and they can't claw out ot it easily.
I have actually practiced fire emergency protocols with my parrot. With a pillowcase, because she hates her carrier (pillowcase first, then shove into carrier). But unless it's an emergency, it's best to always use objects as intended. If you don't it makes you look - how can I say this politely - poorly educated.
Anonymous wrote:Why? Just because it's something you did when you were a child, that's not their intended purpose, they're not designed for it, and they don't have handles... so it's just nostalgia for you? Celebrating frugality?
I would never take my bedding out of my house to use for another purpose than their intended one. It just feels inappropriate.
I grew up in Scotland, with hardcore Halloween. Kids made their own costumes, and had to do a little performance to get a treat at the door. No pillowcases.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a quietly rich neighborhood where nothing was in your face. Literally everyone used pillowcases once they were in 4th or 5th grade. It marked you as a “big kid.” It wasn’t low class, it just meant you’d outgrown the plastic pumpkin.
We kept our old pillowcases on a designated shelf in the linen closet. Ones that were acceptable for Halloween were on the same shelf as ones you used if you were sick and needed to take a pillowcase downstairs or if you were going on a sleepover. They were always singles from formerly matched sets.
My mom had a strict rule: no pillowcase that goes on your bed or is part of a matched pair ever leaves the house.
DD’s favorite pillowcase for sick days is my 6th grade trick or treat pillowcase that matched that year’s costume perfectly.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a quietly rich neighborhood where nothing was in your face. Literally everyone used pillowcases once they were in 4th or 5th grade. It marked you as a “big kid.” It wasn’t low class, it just meant you’d outgrown the plastic pumpkin.
We kept our old pillowcases on a designated shelf in the linen closet. Ones that were acceptable for Halloween were on the same shelf as ones you used if you were sick and needed to take a pillowcase downstairs or if you were going on a sleepover. They were always singles from formerly matched sets.
My mom had a strict rule: no pillowcase that goes on your bed or is part of a matched pair ever leaves the house.
DD’s favorite pillowcase for sick days is my 6th grade trick or treat pillowcase that matched that year’s costume perfectly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody has old pillowcases? Wow. We keep them even if the sheets are not good anymore. Among other things, in case of fire you pop your cat in one and flee. No looking for a carrier or leash and they can't claw out ot it easily.
I have actually practiced fire emergency protocols with my parrot. With a pillowcase, because she hates her carrier (pillowcase first, then shove into carrier). But unless it's an emergency, it's best to always use objects as intended. If you don't it makes you look - how can I say this politely - poorly educated.
Please touch grass and heal.
We're all trying to tell OP nicely that pillowcases are low class. Maybe that's something OP might want to know, even though obviously everyone is above judging people for what they do on Halloween (cough). I'm sure the pillowcase was fine for OP as a child, in their neighborhood. It doesn't work today, with the plethora of sturdy totes available everywhere. Our venerable plastic pumpkin's handle was switched out a long time ago to a length of ribbon. It's lasted over several kids and 10 years. I have the distinct impression that OP just wants to use a pillowcase "bEcAuSe", not because a handle snapped or they can't somehow find a different receptacle.
Again, touch grass.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody has old pillowcases? Wow. We keep them even if the sheets are not good anymore. Among other things, in case of fire you pop your cat in one and flee. No looking for a carrier or leash and they can't claw out ot it easily.