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going to ding dong," she said, laughing."You can't stand next to your friends wearing these because you take up 10 feet," added Marie Tennison, dressed in pink."You knock things off of shelves," agreed Weible. "Our doorways now aren't made like they were in the 1860s, so it's real hard to get through them."Driving a car is next to impossible, Weible said she usually just stuffs her hoop in back when going to a parade, putting it on after arriving.Turns out, that's also what the women did back in the day."They didn't wear their hoops," Weible said. "They had a hook outside of their carriage. They hung the hoops on the hook and then when they got to where they were going, they went inside a dressing room and put their hoops on."There is a hilarious scene in an episode from "I Love Lucy" where, dressed as Little Bo Peep, Lucy tries sitting in a hoop skirt only to have it flip above her head, exposing her bloomers for the camera. Weible said there is a way to avoid that."You just back up to a chair to where you feel the chair at your calf, then you sit down and you're fine," she said. "It's not like on Lucy, though it can be if you do it wrong."There was no chance of that happening Tuesday, each of the ladies glided through the room, careful of what they brushed, eyeballing each seat before they rested themselves on it.McTasney said she understood why those southern women of yore swayed back and forth, even when standing in one place. Those big skirts were pretty handy for swishing a breeze across the knees. A few of them took turns standing over the air conditioning vent in the dining room."I don't