
so i've been thinking about this line from the Kanye song Saint Pablo: "she got the same shoes as my wife but she copped 'them at aldo."
what Ye is saying here is pivoting on a point he's been making a lot lately about fashion: he believes that people should be able to afford cool shit, and that talent in fashion should be going toward creating more egalitarian lines of clothing.
which in a way is sort of happening. a lot of big companies do collaborations with fashion talent these days. i just bought a bomber from uniqlo for $50 that's faux suede. no one in my real-life knows it's "faux-suede" they just think it's a cool jacket, and it was only $50.
the jacket isn't a knockoff. it's a lesser quality version for sure, but it will still maintain all the utility that a jacket should provide - and i still feel good wearing it.
i feel like i'm shifting into buying clothes at a much lower price point nowadays. this is partly because i'm broke as shit, but also because we have affordable options in 2016 that eclipse "fast-fashion" in a lot of ways. i'm sure some of you would argue that a $50 bomber is still fast fashion, but it doesn't seem that way to me. i can buy three wonderful button down shirts for $90. if you rewind 6 years that was a lot harder to pull off.
in summation, as a poor college kid, i feel grateful that i can afford marginally cool clothing and still have money with which to get fucked up on the weekends.