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Post by mc98 on Mar 28, 2022 22:20:08 GMT 10
I second that the 80s were also inconsistent. 1980 still has heavy late 70s vibes and doesn’t have a lot of connections with the late 80s.
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Post by John Titor on Mar 29, 2022 0:07:52 GMT 10
Smartphones def became popular in 2009, in fact the Blackberry Pearl smartphone ( which came out in 2006) was adopted really fast
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Post by Telso on Mar 29, 2022 7:13:44 GMT 10
I second that the 80s were also inconsistent. 1980 still has heavy late 70s vibes and doesn’t have a lot of connections with the late 80s. For sure! Especially the music, ironically enough I can think of many songs from the early 90s that would fit right at home in the late 90s, but I can't do the same for the 80s. The early 80s and the late 80s are like completely different universes music-wise.
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Post by astropoug on Jun 28, 2022 7:03:10 GMT 10
What I will say is that even though I don’t know much about fashion, the 2000s were UNBELIEVABLY inconsistent in that regard, particularly as far as alternative fashion was concerned. The late 2000s was all about colorful clothing, skinny jeans, long hair and bangs, and shades. The early 2000s literally could not be more different if they tried, being defined by baggy clothing, backwards baseball caps, and spiky frosted tips. The only thing that was consistent about the 2000s is where those teens got those clothes from. Hot Topic was popular in all eras of the 2000s, and managed to adapt to changing youth trends throughout: nu metal in the early 2000s, emo in the mid 2000s, and scene in the late 2000s.
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Post by 10slover on Jun 28, 2022 7:21:16 GMT 10
What I will say is that even though I don’t know much about fashion, the 2000s were UNBELIEVABLY inconsistent in that regard, particularly as far as alternative fashion was concerned. The late 2000s was all about colorful clothing, skinny jeans, long hair and bangs, and shades. The early 2000s literally could not be more different if they tried, being defined by baggy clothing, backwards baseball caps, and, not just short hair, but it was actually trendy among edgy teens to be downright BALD. The only thing that was consistent about the 2000s is where those teens got those clothes from. Hot Topic was popular in all eras of the 2000s, and managed to adapt to changing youth trends throughout: nu metal in the early 2000s, emo in the mid 2000s, and scene in the late 2000s. 90s were even more changeful than the 00s fashion-wise Guys still wore crop tops and fishnet shirts in the early 90s!!!
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Post by astropoug on Jun 28, 2022 7:31:36 GMT 10
What I will say is that even though I don’t know much about fashion, the 2000s were UNBELIEVABLY inconsistent in that regard, particularly as far as alternative fashion was concerned. The late 2000s was all about colorful clothing, skinny jeans, long hair and bangs, and shades. The early 2000s literally could not be more different if they tried, being defined by baggy clothing, backwards baseball caps, and, not just short hair, but it was actually trendy among edgy teens to be downright BALD. The only thing that was consistent about the 2000s is where those teens got those clothes from. Hot Topic was popular in all eras of the 2000s, and managed to adapt to changing youth trends throughout: nu metal in the early 2000s, emo in the mid 2000s, and scene in the late 2000s. 90s were even more changeful than the 00s fashion-wise Guys still wore crop tops and fishnet shirts in the early 90s!!! Both the 90s and 00s were very changeful/inconsistent decades as far as fashion is concerned. Like you said, crop tops and fishnet shirts, as well as the infamous mullet haircut were all popular in the early 90s. The mid 90s was all about grunge: long, messy hair, ripped jeans, and flannel. The late 90s shifted to frosted tips, JNCO jeans, and silver futuristic clothing.
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