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What normcore really means

03:30Jennie Barck

During the past few seasons, the trend normcore has come up as the most interpreted and flaunted trend in the fashion world.

The term, originally coined by the trend-forecasting group K-Hole, has changed its meaning from trying to adapt your individual style to that of a fashion community, to acting basic. In the most basic sense, when you google normcore what you get is a bunch of white people in light boyfriend jeans, a white tee and a brown bag, and this is how journalists and consumers alike see the trend.

The popularity of this trend is hard to understand; there's nothing new or innovative about it, and it doesn't stand out as particularly stylish. It seems like something you would just put on on a day when you have nothing else to wear, as a last resort. It's a rejection of designer labels, and can even be seen as anti-fashion.

K-Hole said the rise of normcore can be explained as a reaction to the mass indie movement where being different was valued overall.




However, it does pose as an interesting indication of society's prefrences as well as their perception on normality. For a long time it has been a negative thing, and ”basic” has become somewhat of an insult to many.

New words describing normality have been surfacing; classic, minimalistic, simple and even elegant now describe the style of these normcore supporters. It is not so much a lack of inspiration as it is a personal identity now. Being able to strip down your style to the pure basics has become somewhat admirable as it represents a lifestyle that is perhaps more simple and easygoing.

What normcore also does is give people a collective identity and community. These people are the ones shopping for organic foods, buying from local shops and acting the same way, without realizing there's a label set upon them. This gives a certain amount of pressure to act and dress in the way you are expected to, to reinforce the movement's validity.

But is this the direction we want to be headed? What happened to the peacocks, the trendsetters and the outcast? Surely they're still out there somewhere, waiting for their time to shine. There are still many people who don't want to define themselves as part of a certain stylistic group and just be seen as individuals, and not a part of a labelled group.



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