Quote:
Originally Posted by Haboob
Grunge...
Didn't like much that came from that fad.
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by Haboob
I was 5-15 during that time. Green Day was good, some of The Offspring, Nirvana sucked (and still does, I hate them)... ugh. The music outside of a few bands was awful.
Then the dress? Glad I didn't fall into that fad. I'd probably be a hardcore junkie right now!
|
It's not just about the music, even though music culture plays a huge role in fashion.
You'd be surprised at what things you like now that evolved from a time period or fashion movement that you didn't care for. That's the way fashion trends work; They take inspiration from what's going on currently as a starting point and progress in a different direction to create something new. Grunge stole from punk and mixed it with the flannel culture that was popular in its birthplace. This evolved into mainstream grunge as we saw in stores like American Eagle Outfitters when they first started popping up in the mid to late 90's. Flannel was everywhere, whether it was dirty and used, or dressy and designer. If you like A&F today, you need to thank the 90's.
It's also very cyclical.
Today's hipster fashion parallels 90's grunge in so many ways. Even the attitude is similar. Maybe not as angry, but definitely filled with a lot of disdain for mainstream culture.
Funny thing is, car mods follow the same ebb and flow.
For a few years, everything is shiny. Then it's blacked out. Then it's back to shiny again... or neon coloured. Altezza lights got hot. Then they were gay.
A lot of the car mod culture has to do with going against the mainstream. If the manufacturers start putting Altezza style lights on the cars from the factory, tuners will want solid red lights.
We're all a little anti-mainstream, or punk if you want to call it that
The fashion era I like the least? The 2000's.
I regret my Ed Hardy shirts, overpriced designer denim and gelled hair. I could have been on Jersey Shore, but I was a few years ahead of the curve.