- Joined
- Jan 30, 2025
- Messages
- 405
Yeah. I doubt a place where they let you play billiards and dart will deny you entrance for wearing jeans and sneakers to itYou can do baggy style on nicer venues
Yeah. I doubt a place where they let you play billiards and dart will deny you entrance for wearing jeans and sneakers to itYou can do baggy style on nicer venues
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Things such as contrast color on shoes from the outfit. Slight sag and lil graphic on shirt are also some things I’ve incorporated into my fits as shown below:
Correct gen z is about nostalgia... Being disconnected from tech, so back to 70s,80s,90s were thongs were simplier.... music is also elements of 70s, 80s, 90s ..Weird, it’s like the 90’s all over again.
Oooooohhhh, that makes so much senseCorrect gen z is about nostalgia... Being disconnected from tech, so back to 70s,80s,90s were thongs were simplier.... music is also elements of 70s, 80s, 90s ..
More Y2K but yeah. Just what’s in right nowWeird, it’s like the 90’s all over again
Selvedge (self-edge) already left and returned?? This was a big part of hipster fashion ten or so years ago because of the fetishization of work wear with dudes looking like lumberjacks.
The US used to make it a long time ago. Then the Japanese bought the machines. They love classic american fashion (Kamakura shirts for example). The US fabric manufacturer White Oak Cone Mills went out of business and it had a big effect on the industry. American sewn brands would prize the Japanese fabric too (like Naked and Famous brand).
I remember Tellason was a good brand for wide straight cut, but yeah I don't think they'd do baggy cause it's almost like cosplaying being a coal miner like a costume. These brands sell stuff like "chore jackets". It's a big blue collar fetish type of thing.
Grailed.com best way to $ave if you can get every measurement from the seller (waist, front rise, thigh, knee, inseam, leg opening)
Good find.. can't be spending hundreds on each pair of multiple pants every time the trends changeyeah i found many companies that do baggy too, just don't like the style that much....Like the dude says in the video now the retailers jumping in, since is the new trend.... look at this:
^ only 50 bucks, unreal lol...
The music led to a large teenage audience for the film, and their exuberant response to it sometimes overflowed into violence and vandalism at screenings.[22] In this sense, the film has been seen as marking the start of a period of visible teenage rebellion in the latter half of the 20th century. The film was banned in Memphis, Tennessee and Atlanta, Georgia,[23] with the Atlanta Review Board claiming that it was "immoral, obscene, licentious and will adversely affect the peace, health, morals and good order of the city".[24]
When shown at a south London cinema in Elephant and Castle in 1956 the teenage Teddy Boy audience began to riot, tearing up seats and dancing in the aisles.[25] After that, riots took place around the country wherever the film was shown
Early association:
Jeans originated as durable workwear for miners and laborers.
- 1950s:
Films like "The Wild One" and "Rebel Without a Cause" featuring Marlon Brando and James Dean, respectively, cemented the image of jeans as a symbol of rebellious youth.- 1960s:
Jeans became a uniform for activists in the Civil Rights movement and anti-war protests, signifying a rejection of societal norms and traditional values.- Beyond the US:
This association with rebellion spread internationally, with jeans becoming a symbol of youthful freedom and resistance against authoritarian regimes, such as in the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Good question...How long do you guys think this fashion trend will last?
I’m definitely not on board with all this bagginess and I am skipping this cycle.
Hopefully just a couple of years at most.
I don’t know how many years are left. It will eventually get replaced by skinny jeans again. I’ve already seen several videos about “hedi boys” on TikTok. But it’s still too early to dress that way to get points. You want to be ahead but not too aheadHow long do you guys think this fashion trend will last?
You don't need to, tbh is just for a segment of genz...16 to 23How long do you guys think this fashion trend will last?
I’m definitely not on board with all this bagginess and I am skipping this cycle.
Hopefully just a couple of years at most.
would say up to 30.You don't need to, tbh is just for a segment of genz...16 to 23
Yeswpuld
would say up to 30.
in melbourne, all you see is baggy now.
all of my friends and always everyone when out/clubs, everyone is wearing baggy so i would say up to 16-30 years.