NYC women wearing baggy ‘subway shirts’ over clothes to deter train creeps

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Summer is just around the corner, which means New Yorkers are baring arms — and legs, shoulders and abs.

But many young women are also packing a defense for deterring creepy dudes: the subway shirt.

Alternatively known as a modesty shirt or outfit dampener, it’s a baggy, longer layer that can be thrown over more fitted or revealing clothes to avoid harassment underground.

“As we come out of winter, people act like they’ve never seen a woman before,” Grace Masingale told The Post.

The 22-year-old social media manager from the Upper East Side has had her fair share of harassment by men on the train, who have said everything from “I would like to see what’s underneath that” to “Your breasts are so perky.” Once, she was even followed out of the 23rd Street station on the 1 line.

So now she dons a light sweater over her clothes when she leaves the house, in the hopes of drawing less attention to herself, and takes it off at her destination.

Masingale said she almost always keeps a subway shirt stashed in her purse.

After encountering sexual harassment on the subway, Grace Masingale covers her cleavage and bare arms with a light sweater.
Emmy Park for NY Post
Grace Masinglae without a subway shirt
Safely at her destination, Masingale stows her subway shirt back into her bag.
Emmy Park for NY Post

The subway shirt phenomenon is even going viral on TikTok, with young women in NYC showing off their form-concealing flannels, long T-shirts and baggy oxfords.

“I hate getting on the subway and drawing attention to myself, and I know that skin is always going to draw eyes,” Kitty Lever, a 24-year-old model from Hamilton Heights, told The Post. 

“I have to take public transport because I wouldn’t be able to just afford an Uber every time I wanted to leave my apartment. So I think it’s definitely necessary to protect yourself in any way.”

Kitty Lever in her subway shirt
Model, Kitty Lever opts for an oversized T-shirt when she rides the subway.
courtesy of Kitty Lever.
Kitty Lever's outfit without the subway shirt
Lever says her eye-catching style attracts the wrong kind of attention in the subway, leaving her feeling uncomfortable and sometimes unsafe.
courtesy of Kitty Lever.

And the shirt isn’t just about trying to avoid leering eyes and objectifying comments.

Subway crime has been on the rise in recent years, with subterranean horror stories against women leaving female riders feeling vulnerable.

Rae Hersey, 27, has lived in the city for nine years but only recently started carrying a subway shirt to cover up while underground.

Rae Hersey in her white button-down
Rae Hersey opts to pop a white button-down over more revealing tops when she takes the subway.
courtesy of Rae Hersey

“Coming out of COVID lockdowns, I started to feel significantly less safe in the city,” said the West Village-based content creator, who told The Post that someone on the 1 train pulled a knife on her and her boyfriend in a mid-day attempted robbery last month.

Though the pair managed to get away before things went south, the encounter was a reminder for Hersey of her vulnerability in the subway.

As a result, she’s not riding the train as often right now.

But when she does, her oversized white button-down at least helps her feel less visible.

“Wearing a shirt on top doesn’t necessarily stop anything from happening, but it makes me feel more comfortable,” Hersey said.

TikToker issues PSA for women to wear subway shirts
TikTokers are sharing tips on how to dress for safety in New York’s subways.
@hanselkai/TikTok

And just trying to blend into the crowd is a big part of the baggy-shirt appeal.

Nyrus Abdulle, 23, moved to the city from Los Angeles a year ago and immediately began to “feel uncomfortable being a woman alone in the subway.”

“I’ve heard a lot of horror stories, so it was already an anxiety I had when I moved to New York,” she said. “I just knew when I got here that I shouldn’t look risqué … in the subway.”

So every time she goes out and shows skin — whether she’s wearing a mini skirt, crop top or tight jeans — Abdulle makes sure to throw on a flannel shirt snagged from her father’s closet.

Nyrus Abdulle wearing her dad's oversized shirt
Nyrus Abdulle wears her father’s shirts on the subway to cover up her going-out clothes.
courtesy of Nyrus
Nyrus Abdulle
Abdulle’s outfit is one she would cover up on the subway.
courtesy of Nyrus

“I noticed that I just don’t really get that unwanted attention anymore when I have my dad’s big flannel on,” the Brooklyn resident told The Post.

That said, the women agree it sucks that they can’t wear whatever they want without feeling fearful or objectified.

“I don’t think that any woman in the city should be harassed, no matter what they are wearing on the train,” Masingale said. “But for me personally, it helps make me feel more comfortable in a situation that could potentially be dangerous.”

Alex Palmer agrees.

Alex Palmer in a subway shirt
Alex Palmer covers up her form-fitting dress with a baggy Lady Gaga tee.
Emmy Park for NY Post
Alex Palmer without her subway shirt
“It makes you feel like you can’t wear what you want to wear,” Palmer said about subway harassment.
Emmy Park for NY Post

Having lived her whole life on the Upper East Side, the 32-year-old podcaster has been flashed on the subway, confronted by a masturbating man on a train car and followed out of stations.

It all inspired her to start carrying an outer layer, but she wishes it didn’t have to be that way.

“It makes you feel like you can’t wear what you want to wear,” Palmer said. “And that’s so sad because this is the fashion capital of the world, and I do want to express myself here.”

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