Lol Fashion's Giving Me an Existential Crisis đ
Trend brain, as I call it, encourages us to simplify everything online into something either buyable, understandable, or moral (and therefore worthy of consumption). We may tire of trend talk, but there is a devout certainty to the speed at which theyâre cycled through. There are more choices than ever today, but seemingly less authority as to what... See more
Terry Nguyen âą Trends are dead
Those of us who participate in this dance understand itâs not necessarily building to anything. Itâs odd to see movements like anti-capitalism and Catholicism treated with the same frivolity. Theyâre in, theyâre out, you try them on like low-rise jeans. In the process, ideas get watered down.
Haley Nahman âą #100: New idea trending
K-HOLE and Box1824 captured the new landscape in their breakthrough 2014 report âYouth Mode.â They described an era of âmass indieâ where the search for meaning is premised on differentiation and uniqueness, and proposed a solution in âNormcore.â Humorously, nearly everyone mistook Normcore for being about bland fashion choices rather than the grea... See more
subpixel space âą After Authenticity
This algorithmic repetition isnât just a fashion trend; itâs the prevailing spirit across multiple cultural domains. What Mull observes about clothes, the critic Ted Gioia has been analyzing in music, where the Spotify era delivers whatâs already tested and popular while the opportunities for new artists diminish. Instead of entering a process of d... See more
Ross âą Can We Resist the Age of the Algorithm?
But todayâs rich donât generally wear the 2020 version of royal purple, something like parametrically fitted garments made of nanofibers embellished with synthetic mother of pearl (which might be the results of real growth). Instead, they wear $500 cotton t-shirts with inscrutable references and visual motifs pulled from a smörgĂ„s-moodboard that ma... See more