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Sunday, August 5, 2018

Normcore: Fashion Movement or Massive In-Joke? - The New York Times
src: static01.nyt.com

Normcore is a unisex fashion trend characterized by unpretentious, normal-looking clothing.


Video Normcore



History

Normcore is a portmanteau of the words normal and hardcore. The word first appeared in the webcomic Templar, Arizona before 2009 and was later employed by K-HOLE, a trend forecasting group, in an October 2013 report called "Youth Mode: A Report on Freedom".

As used by K-HOLE, the word normcore referred to an attitude, not a particular code of dress. It was intended to mean "finding liberation in being nothing special." However, a piece in New York magazine that began popularizing the term in February 2014 conflated it with "Acting Basic", another K-HOLE concept which involved dressing neutrally to avoid standing out. It was this sense of normcore which gained popular usage. The characters featured on the television series Seinfeld are frequently cited as exemplifying the aesthetics and ethos of normcore fashion.

The word normcore was named runner-up for neologism of the year by the Oxford University Press in 2014. It was added to the AP Stylebook in 2016.


Maps Normcore



Fashion

Normcore wearers are people who do not wish to distinguish themselves from others by their clothing. This is not to mean that they are unfashionable people who wear whatever comes to hand, but that they consciously choose clothes that are practical and undistinguished - except perhaps for a visible label to impart prestige. The "normcore" trend has been interpreted as a reaction to fashion oversaturation resulting from ever faster-changing fashion trends.

Normcore clothes include everyday items of casual wear such as t-shirts, hoodies, polos, short-sleeved shirts, jeans and chino pants, but not items such as neckties or blouses. These clothes are worn by men and women alike, making normcore a unisex style.

Clothes that meet the "normcore" description are mainly sold by large fashion and retail chains such as The Gap, Jack & Jones, Superdry, Jigsaw and Esprit. They are generally cheaply produced in East Asian countries. Many other retailers such as Marc O'Polo, Woolrich, Desigual, Closed and Scotch & Soda produce normcore-like clothes combined with individual design ideas.


Decoding the Normcore Phenomenon - Lone Wolf Magazine
src: static-wp.lonewolfmag.com


Menocore

A variation on this concept for women has been called menocore, after menopause. Designer brands associated with this style of dressing since the 1980s include Eileen Fisher and Donna Karan. It is loose, comfortable clothing, usually in light or neutral colors, that fits a variety of informal social situations, from teaching to waitressing to eating lunch in a restaurant. The style suggests that the wearer is mature and self-confident, that she is not seeking attention from men, and that she has leisure time and wealth. Because of these associations, it has class connotations and can be stereotyped as a dressing style a thin woman who is middle-aged or older and already wealthy enough that she does not need the kind of lucrative employment that would require wearing either a more formal style of clothing or a work uniform. The style may be adopted by women outside the stereotype as an aspirational style, to suggest that they wish to eventually attain the financial security, leisure, and other lifestyle elements available to older, wealthier women.


Why YOU SHOULD BE WEARING NORMCORE - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


See also

  • Plain dress
  • Undercover_operation#Plainclothes_law_enforcement

Is normcore the new luxury? - The National
src: www.thenational.ae


References


Normcore: 2017 Is the Year Fashion Pushed It to the Extreme
src: static.highsnobiety.com


External links

  • Farrell, Aimee (21 March 2014). "Meet Norma Normcore". Vogue. 

Source of article : Wikipedia