Nostalgia 90s fashion trends GenZ

Nostalgia is a heightened, sugar-coated idea of the past that has been hung onto, creating a new style. It fuels design and the need to re-tell a familiar story. 

In the past year, 80s and 90s nostalgia has been defining the creative industries from fashion to film, to video games and product design. 

Brands have been reviving 80s and 90s bestsellers. And rather than re-imagining 80s and 90s style, they are mimicking the mood and aesthetics of these decades to a T. 

This is a severe case of Nostalgia and an ode to vintage. Only this time vintage happened around the corner less than 2 decades ago. 

Is our current obsession with the 80s and 90s another comfort blanket disguised by fun re-releases? 

Retreating to simpler times has been identified as a form of self-preservation. The Millennial generation especially has grown up amidst economic turmoil, job uncertainty, crippling student debt, global political and environmental unrest. The list goes on. 

According to Google, the most popular fashion searches in 2016 included "What did people wear in the 90s?" and "How to dress like a hippie?" at the 8th and 9th spots. With the slew of disturbing things that happened in 2016, it is apparent, most people wanted to escape to another time, which isn't altogether surprising.

It's key to note, Millennials are also the first digital natives. Widespread Internet access means they grew up inundated with visual cues, highly informed about previous generations and their style via Pinterest, Tumblr and Instagram.

Fashion designers (as the sponges that they are) have been experiencing this bout of nostalgia by channelling sporty 80s and 90s trends. Ashley Williams showcased her SS17 collection dedicated to the late Hollywood teen heartthrob, River Phoenix, presented on a runway staged as a teen bedroom, complete with Madonna CDs and an old box TV. The collection included 80s style party dresses, boxy tailoring, and varsity jackets, also seen in Coach's recent SS17 campaign.  

The Fan dedicated their AW17 collection "Super6" to the original 90s supermodels; Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Claudia Schiffer, Christy Turlington and Linda Evangelista. 

Moving on to media, advertising and popular culture, the Netflix hit series 'Stranger Things' has been described as a “love letter to the ubiquitous cult classics of the ’80s”, referencing sci-fi greats, the Spielberg-ian era of E.T. and The Goonies. All the while resurrecting teen Idol Wynona Ryder. 

Other series conform to this new crop of 80s and 90s revivals with comedies like the Goldbergs and Red Oaks which idealise the 80s family lifestyle.

Last year, Pepsi announced the temporary return of Crystal Pepsi, the clear soda that developed a cult following in its brief initial release from 1992-94. The advertisement portrayed travelling back in time to 1992, while also putting a premium on nostalgia by only releasing the retro classic for a limited time.   

Items like the Motorola StarTac 70 Rainbow, which was released in 1996, is for sale online with prices ranging between £300 and £500. Retro phones are performing well at John Lewis and Urban Outfitters, whilst old school software and Internet graphics have become new again, in what signals the rejection of glossy design. It's about authenticity, memories, and inducing that fuzzy feeling in between. 

In Nostalgia Part II we examine the manifestations of nostalgia in sportswear brands and street style. 

By guest writer Tanja Novak | Editor-in-chief Geraldine Wharry 

 

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    Geraldine Wharry

    Geraldine Wharry is one of the world's leading Futurist specialising in Strategic Foresight, Regenerative Leadership, Speculative Design and Futures Literacy for the creative industries and Fashion.

    Trusted for her futures leadership by organisations ranging from Nike, Seymour Powell, Samsung to Christian Dior, Geraldine’s strategic insights have been applied across fashion, beauty, technology, sustainability, culture, media, gaming, the arts, health, travel and industrial design. Geraldine helps partners envision bold futures with forward-thinking and emergent insights and strategies while leveraging creative, systemic and environmental imperatives.

    Geraldine is also a writer, regular speaker on stages ranging from SXSW to the Adidas global headquarters and lecturer at leading universities. As a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts and a member of the United Nations ' Conscious Fashion & Lifestyle network, Geraldine Wharry's mission is to inspire leaders, industries and people to enact visionary futures, for the greater good of the people and planet.

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