Fashion Cringe: A Generation Divide
Do you still wear a cross-body bag, French-tuck your shirt, or squeeze into tight clothes? Sorry to say, those style choices may be cringeworthy. Brutal honesty is in, and it's time to confront the wardrobe pitfalls that come with growing older.
The line between being old-fashioned and being cringe is thin. Cringe is when you lose touch with fashion while trying to appear youthful. French-tucking your shirt, a once-sophisticated move, now makes one look out of touch. Crossbody bags, once a novel and youthful accessory, have fallen on the wrong side of the generational divide.
Fitted clothes are indeed ageing, and this is where younger generations diverge from their elders. For Gen Z, loose-fitting clothes are the norm. Leggings, once streetwear staples, are no longer fashionable. If you want a gym-ready outfit that looks cool outside, switch to a tracksuit bottom or flared workout pant.
Leather jackets are also having a moment this winter, but only if they're big and blowsy β not close-fitting biker styles. And those with trainers on display? That's just cringe.
But ankles are the real culprit of fashion despair. Gen Z is horrified by exposed ankles and trainer socks. Trousers should pool over shoes, making for an unhygienic and fraying bottom inch. We oldies need to adjust our expectations β after all, we're the ones who once thought it was cool.
Embracing cringe is a badge of honour in this context. We may refuse to accept that we're getting older, but if being called cringe means feeling alive, then so be it. The cycle of fashion will continue, and we'll keep embarrassing ourselves trying to keep up.
Do you still wear a cross-body bag, French-tuck your shirt, or squeeze into tight clothes? Sorry to say, those style choices may be cringeworthy. Brutal honesty is in, and it's time to confront the wardrobe pitfalls that come with growing older.
The line between being old-fashioned and being cringe is thin. Cringe is when you lose touch with fashion while trying to appear youthful. French-tucking your shirt, a once-sophisticated move, now makes one look out of touch. Crossbody bags, once a novel and youthful accessory, have fallen on the wrong side of the generational divide.
Fitted clothes are indeed ageing, and this is where younger generations diverge from their elders. For Gen Z, loose-fitting clothes are the norm. Leggings, once streetwear staples, are no longer fashionable. If you want a gym-ready outfit that looks cool outside, switch to a tracksuit bottom or flared workout pant.
Leather jackets are also having a moment this winter, but only if they're big and blowsy β not close-fitting biker styles. And those with trainers on display? That's just cringe.
But ankles are the real culprit of fashion despair. Gen Z is horrified by exposed ankles and trainer socks. Trousers should pool over shoes, making for an unhygienic and fraying bottom inch. We oldies need to adjust our expectations β after all, we're the ones who once thought it was cool.
Embracing cringe is a badge of honour in this context. We may refuse to accept that we're getting older, but if being called cringe means feeling alive, then so be it. The cycle of fashion will continue, and we'll keep embarrassing ourselves trying to keep up.