by b4my » Tue Dec 03, 2013 11:05 pm
Unwashed that's so true. I just posted about being about to buy the WTAPS vans and no matter how much I lie to myself about it, I know I probably wouldn't get them if they didn't have that label on the front because I like the thought of belonging to the club, of walking into maas and stacks rocking them and having the staff assume that I at least somewhat know what I'm talking about. I used to want attention with my clothing, then I decided I didn't want to attract any attention, but then I realized that I did want attention, but only from the right people.
I forget if it was someone here or some other forum (it's a pretty common viewpoint) but I remember someone talking about how people buy clothes to buy into a world way more than to buy the actual clothing itself. How the best designers create an entire world with their clothing and buying it is like a pass into it, and that's why young people look weird in yohji and people who aren't emaciated strung out 22 year olds look weird in st. laurent, it doesn't fit the world. Even people who are really into techy clothing are into the world imagined by techy clothing.
And I guess the reason hyped pieces are hyped is because they instantly communicate exactly what that world and that designer is about. Like you look at an Undercover knit rider and you instantly know what Undercover stands for, the whole sort of punk with that weird gypsy pirate wanderer edge.
But I think it's important to a lot of people to bring some degree of individuality to that, that's why you hear "dressed by the internet" thrown around as an insult so much, it's the idea that someone's not really about that world, they're just pretending to be, which is a funny thing because it's not your aesthetic, it's Rick Owens' or Jun Takahashi's or James Jebbia's or whoever's. But it's still irritating to see someone "dressed by the internet", it's strange.
I dunno I have a lot of unorganized thoughts on this subject. Feel like I'm telling you things you must already know.
teck, for me it's more the idea that I'll drop a lot of money on some clothes and not be interested in them later. I've been into fashion for about a year now and during that time my tastes have gone from streetwear to raf and st. laurent to gothy drapey shit to what I'm into currently (just streetwear again, but more japanese and more expensive) and I feel like I've finally arrived at what I'm comfortable in, but who knows if that will be true in 6 months? So why should I be dropping money on clothing right now if my tastes are just going to change? But it feels so right in the moment so I keep doing it anyway.
Last edited by
b4my on Tue Dec 03, 2013 11:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.