Jewish men use a bobby pin (small black inconspicous clip found in any beauty supply or drug store) to secure their Yarmulke. Good question by the way. I often wondered the same thing, until one day I noticed. === === That is only the case with modern Jews who let their hair grow long, but frum Jews who cut their hair almost to clean shaved, their yarmulke just stays there tight.
They didn't. The yarmulke is a Jewish garment that goes back to before the Romans.
Orthodox Jewish men wear the Yarmulke all the time. Other Jews (male and female) decide for themselves whether or not to wear it.
A kippah, or yarmulke. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kippah
No. You don't have to be orthodox to wear a yarmulke. In fact, you don't have to be Jewish. Some modern liberal Jewish congregations have pronounced the yarmulke optional during services or have dropped it completely, but it is still primarily a matter of individual choice. There are even some Jews who are quite secular, do not regularly pray or attend synagogue services, but who wear the yarmulke in general daily life.
It is a kippah or Yarmulke. In fact, nobody uses the term skullcap except non-Jews.
A yarmulke can be laundered in any way appropriate to the particular fabric, and then formed over an inverted bowl to dry.
I am not sure if a yarmulke should be dry-cleaned. Even the Pope wears a yarmulke!
Orthodox Jews always wear a head-covering (kippay/yarmulkah, or a hat).
The traditional Jewish knit cap is a yarmulke, also known as a kippah.
yarmulke - the cap that religious Jews wear Yashmak - a veil worn to cover the face y-fronts - men's underwear
The proper way to wear a yarmulke is to wear it on the Sabbath, Shabbat, or when in Shul. One should wear a yarmulke whenever everyone else is wearing one.
They are Jews who keep the Torah.