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Post by mc98 on Jul 9, 2021 11:44:29 GMT 10
For those who lived through the 90s or knows a lot about the 90s, the nosalagia for the 1970s was bigger but 60s nostalgia was still going strong throughout the 90s. Here are some examples:
-Tie Dye shirts were a callback to the 60s psychedelic aesthetic. -Girls wearing colorful psychedelic dresses as costumes(Even though they were mistakenly labeled as "70s") -The first two Austin Power's movies. -Britpop is heavily inspired by the swinging sixties. -Flip dos made a mini comeback with women in the mid-late 90s
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Post by John Titor on Jul 9, 2021 11:49:21 GMT 10
For those who lived through the 90s or knows a lot about the 90s, the nosalagia for the 1970s was bigger but 60s nostalgia was still going strong throughout the 90s. Here are some examples: -Tie Dye shirts were a callback to the 60s psychedelic aesthetic. -Girls wearing colorful psychedelic dresses as costumes(Even though they were mistakenly labeled as "70s") -The first two Austin Power's movies. -Britpop is heavily inspired by the swinging sixties. -Flip dos made a mini comeback with women in the mid-late 90s yes I remember it well back then 60s was everywhere
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Post by 10slover on Jul 9, 2021 12:08:11 GMT 10
I heard 60s revival was big in the late 80s and early 90s
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Post by mc98 on Jul 9, 2021 12:18:09 GMT 10
I heard 60s revival was big in the late 80s and early 90s That era was the peak of 60s nostalgia.
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Post by slashpop on Jul 9, 2021 20:36:04 GMT 10
I heard 60s revival was big in the late 80s and early 90s That era was the peak of 60s nostalgia. The 60s nostagia started around 1988-1990, earliest could be 87-88, but it didn’t catch on until a bit after. 60s slowly faded around 97-99. 70s nostalgia around 1993-95, earliest could be 92-93, slowly faded in 2003-2005.
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Post by 10slover on Jul 9, 2021 20:57:00 GMT 10
That era was the peak of 60s nostalgia. The 60s nostagia started around 1988-1990, earliest could be 87-88, but it didn’t catch on until a bit after. 60s slowly faded around 97-99. 70s nostalgia around 1993-95, earliest could be 92-93, slowly faded in 2003-2005. This really bugs me. Why does the revival of some decades last longer than the revival of other decades? We've been stuck in this "80s-fake-nostalgia-limbo" since the 2000s, then came 90s nostalgia to make things worse, they don't seem to be going away. I get why 90s Nostalgia is big, but what about the 80s? 1980 was 40 years ago for gods sake. Was 50s Nostalgia big in the 90s?
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Post by slashpop on Jul 9, 2021 21:02:12 GMT 10
Grunge and alternative rock was to some extent, not entirely, a throwback to the 70s and 60s around this time in terms of musical inspiration and style. Also longer hair in males in the early to mid 90s has some connection to this, including the madchester/shoegaze scene in the late 80s in england ex. stone roses with an updated mod influenced 60s look and hits that incorporated 60s sounds.
Afros were a thing in 1993. You started to see bellbottom jeans comeback around 94-95 and hippy inspired common fashion was a thing in 95-99 and tom some extent the Y2k/early 2000s. Floral and peace signs and imagery from boths eras (60s/70s) were also common throughout the 90s, in general graphics,vending machine stickers and rave scene imagery, jewelery etc
60s/70 leftist counter cultural influence must of have some influence in the 90s in general especially with leftist movments and 90s feminism/riot girl movement including the politics of groups like public enemy.
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Post by slashpop on Jul 9, 2021 21:29:55 GMT 10
The 60s nostagia started around 1988-1990, earliest could be 87-88, but it didn’t catch on until a bit after. 60s slowly faded around 97-99. 70s nostalgia around 1993-95, earliest could be 92-93, slowly faded in 2003-2005. This really bugs me. Why does the revival of some decades last longer than the revival of other decades? We've been stuck in this "80s-fake-nostalgia-limbo" since the 2000s, then came 90s nostalgia to make things worse, they don't seem to be going away. I get why 90s Nostalgia is big, but what about the 80s? 1980 was 40 years ago for gods sake. Was 50s Nostalgia big in the 90s? There was some 60s nostagia in the early 2000s but it wasn't as intense as earlier. 50s nostagia seems to have been a thing around the late 70s to around the late 80s but with some influence lasting throughout the 90s its a bit harder to pinpoint things with 50's nostalgia, I don't think it was as intense as decade influence in other eras. 80's nostalgia has kind of been thing since 2002-2004, with earliest origins from around 1997. It really kicked off around 2004-2006, declining a bit in the mid 2010s, just starting to fade a bit more in 2018-2020 but it still is ongoing without the same intensity as earlier years 90s nostalgia has been around since 2007-2008 with origins from the mid 00s. However It really kicked off around 2011-2012 and is still ongoing, we may see a change in the next few years, not just now, because 90s retro nostalgia franchises have strong lasting power and late 90s and Y2K nostalgia is still not in full swing.
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Post by mc98 on Jul 9, 2021 23:52:29 GMT 10
This really bugs me. Why does the revival of some decades last longer than the revival of other decades? We've been stuck in this "80s-fake-nostalgia-limbo" since the 2000s, then came 90s nostalgia to make things worse, they don't seem to be going away. I get why 90s Nostalgia is big, but what about the 80s? 1980 was 40 years ago for gods sake. Was 50s Nostalgia big in the 90s? There was some 60s nostagia in the early 2000s but it wasn't as intense as earlier. 50s nostagia seems to have been a thing around the late 70s to around the late 80s but with some influence lasting throughout the 90s its a bit harder to pinpoint things with 50's nostalgia, I don't think it was as intense as decade influence in other eras. 80's nostalgia has kind of been thing since 2002-2004, with earliest origins from around 1997. It really kicked off around 2004-2006, declining a bit in the mid 2010s, just starting to fade a bit more in 2018-2020 but it still is ongoing without the same intensity as earlier years 90s nostalgia has been around since 2007-2008 with origins from the mid 00s. However It really kicked off around 2011-2012 and is still ongoing, we may see a change in the next few years, not just now, because 90s retro nostalgia franchises have strong lasting power and late 90s and Y2K nostalgia is still not in full swing. The 90s nostalgia in the 2010s is centered around kid culture. It seems that people haven't fully embraced the teenage/young adult Gen X 90s besides flannel coming back.
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Post by slashpop on Jul 10, 2021 0:29:27 GMT 10
There was some 60s nostagia in the early 2000s but it wasn't as intense as earlier. 50s nostagia seems to have been a thing around the late 70s to around the late 80s but with some influence lasting throughout the 90s its a bit harder to pinpoint things with 50's nostalgia, I don't think it was as intense as decade influence in other eras. 80's nostalgia has kind of been thing since 2002-2004, with earliest origins from around 1997. It really kicked off around 2004-2006, declining a bit in the mid 2010s, just starting to fade a bit more in 2018-2020 but it still is ongoing without the same intensity as earlier years 90s nostalgia has been around since 2007-2008 with origins from the mid 00s. However It really kicked off around 2011-2012 and is still ongoing, we may see a change in the next few years, not just now, because 90s retro nostalgia franchises have strong lasting power and late 90s and Y2K nostalgia is still not in full swing. The 90s nostalgia in the 2010s is centered around kid culture. It seems that people haven't fully embraced the teenage/young adult Gen X 90s besides flannel coming back. To some extent yes, but old school videogames transcend kid culture, and a lot of 90s things like aspects of music (grunge, house), iconic imagery,TV series, fashion elements, 90s things mixed into hipster/tumblr culture were/still are definitely a thing espeically from 2012-2017.H&M since 2008 or 2010 has consistently had 90s casual beyond flannel, with grungey clothes, and basic solid 90s color palette and pattern designs and casual 90s pants, it just become a bit more popular around 11/2012. It seems people haven't fully and proper embraced a wide variety of 90s culture from 1992/1993-1999 outside of the most stereotypical, early and core 90s things and nostagia driven gaming and childhood fads to certain degree, which is heavily marketed to fans but definitely still is common.
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Post by mc98 on Jul 10, 2021 1:44:16 GMT 10
The 90s nostalgia in the 2010s is centered around kid culture. It seems that people haven't fully embraced the teenage/young adult Gen X 90s besides flannel coming back. To some extent yes, but old school videogames transcend kid culture, and a lot of 90s things like aspects of music (grunge, house), iconic imagery,TV series, fashion elements, 90s things mixed into hipster/tumblr culture were/still are definitely a thing espeically from 2012-2017.H&M since 2008 or 2010 has consistently had 90s casual beyond flannel, with grungey clothes, and basic solid 90s color palette and pattern designs and casual 90s pants, it just become a bit more popular around 11/2012. It seems people haven't fully and proper embraced a wide variety of 90s culture from 1992/1993-1999 outside of the most stereotypical, early and core 90s things and nostagia driven gaming and childhood fads to certain degree, which is heavily marketed to fans but definitely still is common. 60s nostalgia was more centered on adolescent culture in the 90s than the 90s nostalgia in the 2010s. We haven't seen a full-on eurodance/house, g-funk, and grunge throwback in music. Some 90s fashion did came back in the late 2010s-now such as baggy JNCO like jeans, mom jeans, and curtain hair. I'm surprised media didn't catch on the 90s aesthetics seen by these commercials:
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Post by slashpop on Jul 10, 2021 2:05:32 GMT 10
To some extent yes, but old school videogames transcend kid culture, and a lot of 90s things like aspects of music (grunge, house), iconic imagery,TV series, fashion elements, 90s things mixed into hipster/tumblr culture were/still are definitely a thing espeically from 2012-2017.H&M since 2008 or 2010 has consistently had 90s casual beyond flannel, with grungey clothes, and basic solid 90s color palette and pattern designs and casual 90s pants, it just become a bit more popular around 11/2012. It seems people haven't fully and proper embraced a wide variety of 90s culture from 1992/1993-1999 outside of the most stereotypical, early and core 90s things and nostagia driven gaming and childhood fads to certain degree, which is heavily marketed to fans but definitely still is common. 60s nostalgia was more centered on adolescent culture in the 90s than the 90s nostalgia in the 2010s. We haven't seen a full-on eurodance/house, g-funk, and grunge throwback in music. Some 90s fashion did came back in the late 2010s-now such as baggy JNCO like jeans, mom jeans, and curtain hair. I'm surprised media didn't catch on the 90s aesthetics seen by these commercials: I’ve been saying that most mid to late 90s culture hasn’t been fully embraced for a while except a bit here and there . 90s nostagia was to some extent based on childhood fads for those that were older in 2010s not entirely childhood focused things. However early 90s inspired fashion from casual clothing to hi top fades and specific early 90s color, pattern and style designs have been in the mainstream since 2011-2012, while starting to grow a bit earlier. Soft grunge was also big for a while in the first half of the 2010s.Nirvana shirts were a fashion in the early to mid 2010s. You’ve had tons of grunge revival bands in the 00s/2010s and post grunge bands with a 90s style, even though it was never full on, also due to rock in decline. Also hip house/witch house and songs with 90s house influence and micro genres like sea punk have a visible 90s influence in music and aesthetics for least a decade now. I would say we need at least 3 or 4 more years to explore and exhaust 90sness especially from 93-99
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Post by 10slover on Jul 11, 2021 1:16:25 GMT 10
I think we haven't had a grunge revival because post-grunge and 90s alt rock inspired music was still popular in the 2000s and early 2010s
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Post by astropoug on Jul 15, 2021 12:39:16 GMT 10
I think we haven't had a grunge revival because post-grunge and 90s alt rock inspired music was still popular in the 2000s and early 2010s This. So many labels wanted new bands to be the next Nirvana. Post-grunge lasted WAY longer than it should've, and became stale and hated. With post-grunge dead, people DID NOT want it back. You are getting some bands reviving true grunge, but they're most alternative/underground bands. A lot of the emo revival like Title Fight take influence from 90s grunge, blending it with midwest emo.
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Post by astropoug on Jul 15, 2021 13:14:08 GMT 10
I was looking at some movies that were popular in the 90s, and you can definitely tell there was 60s influence. Two movies that come to mind are 101 Dalmatians and The Flintstones, both DIRECTLY based off successful media properties from the 60s. Another noteworthy example would be Forrest Gump, basically, one long tribute to baby boomer culture, which mentions specific events like the Vietnam War. There's also GTA London 1961 and 1969, both from 1999, AKA the only GTA games to take place outside the US. Cartoon Network in the 90s was based heavily off 60s Hanna-Barbera cartoons.
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