Anonymous wrote:Sucks when you have pants hemmed at the length of the heel of boots, etc.
I’m 5’5” and solve having to get dress pants hemmed/altered by wearing a heel. It also elongates the look. Taking off the shoes/boots makes my pants all bunched up and dragging on the floor.
Anonymous wrote:This “no shoes” trend seems weird to me. Why not require someone to change into a robe when entering your home? After all, clothes carry germs too and people will be sitting on your furniture?
Most US- born Americans I know don’t do the “no shoes” thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a reason this is posted every 3-4 weeks? I'm beginning to think it is a troll...
Anyway, in MY culture, shoes stay on around strangers/acquaintances. If you ask me to remove them, I will, but I will never come back to your house.
Also, I'd say a good 8 out of 10 "shoeless homes" have a dog. Don't kid yourself thinking because you vaccuum daily, that there isn't dog hair all over your carpet/rugs. It then sticks to my socks, and I bring it into my home. Talk about rude.
Yes!!
I find the cat hair to be more of a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a reason this is posted every 3-4 weeks? I'm beginning to think it is a troll...
Anyway, in MY culture, shoes stay on around strangers/acquaintances. If you ask me to remove them, I will, but I will never come back to your house.
Also, I'd say a good 8 out of 10 "shoeless homes" have a dog. Don't kid yourself thinking because you vaccuum daily, that there isn't dog hair all over your carpet/rugs. It then sticks to my socks, and I bring it into my home. Talk about rude.
Yes!!
Anonymous wrote:Is there a reason this is posted every 3-4 weeks? I'm beginning to think it is a troll...
Anyway, in MY culture, shoes stay on around strangers/acquaintances. If you ask me to remove them, I will, but I will never come back to your house.
Also, I'd say a good 8 out of 10 "shoeless homes" have a dog. Don't kid yourself thinking because you vaccuum daily, that there isn't dog hair all over your carpet/rugs. It then sticks to my socks, and I bring it into my home. Talk about rude.
Anonymous wrote:Asian here- Guests in our culture know to remove their shoes when visiting friends and family (especially in the winter). On occasion we have visitors who do not take them off when visiting; is it rude to ask them to take their shoes off or perhaps have a sign outside our door or unside our home? What do you do in your home?