Talk:2020s in fashion
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The youth fashion section (and other complaints)
I think that instead of the currently existent Dark Academia and Goblincore/Fairy Grunge sections, there should be a short writeup on "internet aesthetic culture" as a whole (this article was the best I could find detailing the phenomenon). Also, while this might just be me, I think the 2000s and 1980s influences section under men's clothing needs a serious revision. That third sentence is more than 3000 characters long, haha. Tridentarii3apologist (talk) 04:55, 29 December 2021 (UTC)
I concur with this. The aesthetics brought up are considered part of a broader system of "aesthetics" or "-cores" by the practitioners, online influencers, instagram, tiktok, twitter and tumblr pages. The trend in general centers around tribalism but instead of focusing on subculture or fandom culture, it draws its power from shared codes like color palettes, emulated fashion eras, etc, inviting the user to "find their aesthetic" in a way similar to the Marie Kondo precept of "choosing what sparks joy" and as a means of escapism. Academia and Fairy Grunge are only parts of the categorizations invented on social media, which also include aethereal, "art hoe", techwear/cyberpunk, cottagecore, kidcore, weirdcore and more. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.178.122.159 (talk) 04:10, 18 April 2022 (UTC)
The 1980s section in particular, confusingly has non-80s specific items such as Ivy League cardigans and 1940s double breasted suits mentioned too. The section should be titled "period revivals" or something similar.--Mr. 123453334 (talk) 21:26, 10 May 2022 (UTC)
There's nothing confusing about it, if you knew anything about 1980s fashion. The double breasted 1940s style suits were revived in the 80s as businesswear, and Ivy League clothing was revived as the preppy look. 81.96.86.81 (talk) 15:20, 15 May 2022 (UTC)
"Dopamine Dressing"
I think a section should be included for this recent fashion trend called "dopamine dressing", where people wear bright colors to improve their mood. sources may include:
How To Embrace Dopamine Dressing This Summer | British Vogue
What is dopamine dressing? (harpersbazaar.com)
How 'dopamine dressing' became TikTok's latest happiness hack (nypost.com)