Why are the 80s back this fall?
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Category: Fashion Forum Name: A Passion For Fashion Forum Description: Shoptalk - Hot styles, designers, where to buy, deals & steals. URL: /forum_posts.php?TID=21036
Printed Date: Dec 26, 2024 at 11:28am
Topic: Why are the 80s back this fall?
Posted By: Lyris Subject: Why are the 80s back this fall? Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 7:14am
That's what I keep reading. Delias.com (which used to be really cool when I was in high school but is now identical to all the other vendors selling cheap, thin clothing) has joyously announced "we're doing the 80's, ladies!" A few examples:
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408L - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408L
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=shoes&XRF=c2&i=14664 - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=shoes&XRF=c2&i=14664
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408U - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408U
All I ask is...why?!?!?!
------------- Look for beauty, and you will find no intelligence. Look for intelligence and you will find both.Proud member of the Cult of All Soft
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Replies: 23 Posted By: Lyris
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 7:14am
That's what I keep reading. Delias.com (which used to be really cool when I was in high school but is now identical to all the other vendors selling cheap, thin clothing) has joyously announced "we're doing the 80's, ladies!" A few examples:
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408L - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408L
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=shoes&XRF=c2&i=14664 - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=shoes&XRF=c2&i=14664
http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408U - http://delias.com/cat/html/item.cepl?c=tops&XRF=c2&i=0408U
All I ask is...why?!?!?! |
Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 9:32am
Probably because fashion goes in circles and the designers just decided to bring back some of the stuff.
I hope that awful overstyled hair from that era doesn't come back, or at least that many people will have enough taste to avoid it.
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Posted By: demodoll
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 3:09pm
That doesn't look like what I remember from the '80s but then I was mostly interested in work apparel back then. I really like '80s suits and dresses. I know most people think this is crazy but I think the shoulder pads and longer skirts were much more flattering to the average female figure than some of the stuff that is out there now. $ S bd`ter - ,,bb - 0b` /4! $(!, $- $%%, ` "6
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Posted By: Lyris
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 4:35pm
I think as long as no one starts wearing fluorescent colors or those hideous stirrup pants...I'll be all right. |
Posted By: demodoll
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 9:50pm
Oh gosh, stirrups. Yuck. They were a repeat from the sixties too. One recycled look that should have stayed in the bin. $ S bd`ter - ,,bb - 0b` /4! $(!, $- $%%, ` "6
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Posted By: tina m
Date Posted: Sep 10, 2003 at 10:18pm
Lyris. Aren't you 22 years old? You were like 7 years old in the 80s! I'm 27 and I don't even remember the 80s that well except for the music, because they always play music from the 70s and 80s on the radio.
What I do recall of the fashion of the 80s was that it was cheap and obnoxious. Bright cheap looking clothes, mohawk haircuts -(including on women)-, big hair on male rock bands, big earrings, etc. I guess it wasn't the most stylish of decades. I'm sure their was stylish fashion as well in the 80s but the stuff for young people back then wasn't the best.
Some of the music was ok though but there is at least some good music in every decade.4!,!
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Posted By: Kuroneko
Date Posted: Sep 11, 2003 at 3:37am
Why? Because they just finished doing the '60s and '70s retro, so now it's time for the '80s again, of course. I read once that fashion repeats itself in twenty-year cycles, so being in the 2000s now, it looks like we're about due for another dose of '80s. *shrugs* I was a kid then, so I'm finding the resurrection of '80s toys like Care Bears, My Little Pony, He-man, Strawberry Shortcake, etc. way cooler than any cheesy fashions they could resurrect :-) .! % Aaebade d !, ` . 4``
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Posted By: Lyris
Date Posted: Sep 11, 2003 at 6:29am
!p`",$ p( ` d (
Unfortunately, Tina, some things are so bad as to stick in the mind forever: scary Mrs. Pirana from the 5th grade, the Challenger, 80s fashion. I was born in '81 so I remember well the late 80s and the early 90s when the big-hair era was still on the way out. |
Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 11, 2003 at 10:21am
I think that shoulder pads in women's suits are severe and mannish looking but that's just my opininion.
Tina, I've seen pictures from 80s mags where the models are flatteringly elegant and put-together (and think of the late Princess Diana, but maybe such people fall into an entirely different class) but that seems to have been the higher end of fashion. There was indeed much tackiness, cheapness and excess in clothes and hair for younger people particularly, as you say. And I've been seeing more mohawk-type haircuts lately...
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Posted By: SuperGrover
Date Posted: Sep 11, 2003 at 10:26pm
LOL Lyris! I love the 80s! I want to wear leg warmers again!
And you're right... I remember when Delia's was good stuff. But maybe we're too old to know good stuff anymore. I suppose 80s retro is still cutting edge. Sort of. !) ic a p`` -& `b . @p )2 ,-$ ! ! $ -$ ` ,
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Posted By: enfys
Date Posted: Sep 12, 2003 at 6:06pm
I was born in 88, so I have no recollection of the 80s at all. I don't get why the retro clothes never look like the original fashions. I wish that shellsuits were never invented though. If the twenty year cycle is true then we will be subjected to them in a few years time. NNNNNNOOOoooo!!!! I'm more than old enough to remember them. $- P cn`dp0% 00BB .(4`p /.%%%,-)! !!%,!,`" !,
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Posted By: SuperGrover
Date Posted: Sep 12, 2003 at 11:45pm
t`" "$`. )` $
<----- Feels old. !) ic a p`` -& `b . @p )2 ,-$ ! ! $ -$ ` ,
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Posted By: enfys
Date Posted: Sep 13, 2003 at 3:05pm
T@%$B$0!P @ d
<----- Feels old. [/QUOTE]
Ah, come on. You can't be that old. If you were old you wouldn't be able to remember the 80s, because your memory would have gone. Probably. Unless you've got a really good memory. How good is your memory? $- P cn`dp0% 00BB .(4`p /.%%%,-)! !!%,!,`" !,
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Posted By: Lyris
Date Posted: Sep 13, 2003 at 6:11pm
SG *isn't* that old, and neither am I....but yes, the 15-year-olds among us make 20-somethings feel ancient But I think we know deep down we're not. Now my great-grandmother who is 97 and too senile to talk about, on the other hand..... |
Posted By: demodoll
Date Posted: Sep 13, 2003 at 9:03pm
Well, I am old but I can still remember the '80s and I think fashion wise that was my favorite decade. It was the first one where I could actually afford the clothes. I have really hated the resurgence of '60s and '70s stuff, probably for the same reason that all you youngsters hate the '80s--I had to wear all that stuff in high school and it looked dumb in retrospect. To me Princess Diana epitomizes the look of the decade. And maybe Linda Evans and some of the Dynasty ladies (although Joan Collins was too over the top for me). Also Victoria Principal and Linda Gray. They always looked great.
If you look at the higher end, business end stuff from back then it was really very nice. The "dress for success" principal was coined during that decade and everyone really dressed up. Looking sloppy and casual was considered really bad. Then came casual Fridays that gradually went to casual all week. I remember once when the a/c went off in my building that we were not allowed to take off our panty hose (the CEO made a special decree), even though the temperature was over 100 degrees! Now they tell me that no one even wears hose anymore (imagine that!) but I don't have to go into the office much so it doesn't affect me either way. I personally hope that more formal business attire comes back in. I think it was a much better atmosphere to work in when everyone worried a bit about how they looked. $ S bd`ter - ,,bb - 0b` /4! $(!, $- $%%, ` "6
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Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 14, 2003 at 5:24am
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Dress for success? Being judged upon your appearance? Having your comfort limited and your individuality undermined? Out upon these ideas! Let the individuals have their freedom. So it's not enough to do the work, but you also have to wear what another tells you? Far from being comfortable working in such an atmosphere, I would feel stifled by it. Down with needless rules. What's next, going back to making men men come to work with nooses around their collars? No thanx, Demodoll. I would feel
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Posted By: demodoll
Date Posted: Sep 14, 2003 at 9:51am
I suspect that like it or not that is exactly what you are going to see happening over the next few years. I lived through the '70s with casual everywhere and everyone dressing down because it was fashionable and being sloppy and generally being "individuals." I think right now it is fashion to be casual and because people get bored with anything, the pendulum will swing back the other way and a more formal look will be in fashion. There is nothing wrong with trying to look your best and I personally feel much better about everything when I am dressed up. That is just me. It doesn't mean that is true for anyone else. I think having pride in my appearance and enjoying the pretty clothes I was wearing made me a better employee than perhaps I am now wearing shorts and flip flops (it could also be that after 25 years I am sick of working). Again, that is just how I am -- I certainly won't presume to dictate what anyone else should wear.
I graduated from college in 1978 and went straight into the professional world. I had never worn much beyond jeans and college girl clothes because that was fashionable. I quickly learned to dress very differently in the working world and found that I really liked wearing pretty suits and dresses with heels. I got lots of compliments which I never had in my jeans. I guess maybe because I am real tall I just look better in dress clothes.
Whatever, I believe that the casual look of the last few years will begin to change for a more formal look and yes, I think you may even see ties and white starched shirts return too. That just seems to be the way the cycle runs. You may say you will never conform to that but I find that most middle class people are eventually forced to conform to some degree because we have to eat. $ S bd`ter - ,,bb - 0b` /4! $(!, $- $%%, ` "6
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Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 15, 2003 at 1:33am
Well, there's nothing wrong with dressing up if you feel good about it. But making you honor a dress code where that is not essential for the job, that's a different story.
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Posted By: Kuroneko
Date Posted: Sep 15, 2003 at 4:20am
Maybe people who were ridiculed on their clothes in school are the ones who're all for dress codes. . . or maybe I just really like the look of suits and uniforms. . . but I think dress codes are a good thing, in a structured environment like work or school. People are less likely to be ridiculed or looked down on over clothing that way, and less competition over who's best-dressed or who's got more money to spend on keeping up with fashion. People like me, who have very little to no concern over fashion and even less money to put towards designer clothing can actually benefit from dress codes. I wish there had been one when I was in school, actually. . .! % Aaebade d !, ` . 4``
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Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 15, 2003 at 6:28am
Well, Kurenko, when I was in middle school in the early 90s, designer shoes were all the rage (think, Reebok Pumps, Nike Airs etc). They were so expensive that my parents wouldn't buy them for me. My peers teased me for my "cheap" shoes. Nonetheless, I would always have rather dealt with it than had grownups "solve" the problem for me by dictating what I can and can't wear. The thought of school uniforms was always, you could say, more degrading and distasteful to me than some teasing.
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Posted By: katrink
Date Posted: Sep 28, 2003 at 7:29pm
I have to agree with Demodoll. People in general looked better in the mid 80s. I would much rather do business with a well dressed man or woman than someone in clothes 12 sizes to big or way way to tight and skirts up to who knows where on someone older than 6 years old. I also think we had a little more self respect than people have now. Think about it if you look good you generally feel good too. I also " came of age" in the eighties. By the way I am 48 so I've already lived through the low rise, flared, belly hanging out 70s and I will be glad to see it creep back under the rocks again.
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Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 29, 2003 at 10:05am
I see where you're coming from, Katrin, but let me put a few things into perspective. For one thing, not everyone is as sloppy as you suggest. Some choose to be, while others (like me, more or less) wear jeans and t-shirts, and still others wear "business casuals", even if their workplace allows jeans. And there are still those who (whether by dress code or by choice) wear suits and ties. I am an easygoing guy and would hate to have to dress up just so I can go to work in an average workplace. For me, "self respect" means making my own decision about how I'm going to dress, if that doesn't make a significant impact on the job I do. And for my line of work (education), I think there is absolutely nothing wrong with totally casual clothes. And I would say the same thing for the mainstream business world in many cases, though here, "business casual" or even ties are more likely to be required. When you do business with someone, I think you should care about that person's skills, honesty and relevance to your relationship. If it were up to me, I'd call caring too much about professional dress UNprofessional. Anyway, most of the people I know are not particularly sloppy, and whatever the ups and downs of their style, often look IMO more natural than many people in the 1980s.
Sorry to get so controversial. I'm not trying to scream at you or anything, just to make a point about something I feel strongly about. There is nothing wrong with dressing up (though uncomfortable ties are one of the most useless inventions ever) but it should be optional in most jobs.
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Posted By: katrink
Date Posted: Sep 29, 2003 at 5:03pm
No offense taken, Duke. Hell I live in Florida so casual is the way of life here. I just feel like some people should take a really LONG look in the mirror before they leave for the day (sometimes me included). Thanks for responding. I'm new to this so I hope you aren't offended by my little tirade.
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Posted By: duke
Date Posted: Sep 30, 2003 at 1:49am
Not at all. It's good we can discuss different opinions without animosity.
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