1. am c***
2. My revulsion is rooted in caring about where people who care about the same things I care about put their money, especially when those purchases are almost entirely for ideological purposes. Beyond the pedantry someone responded to me with as to which pieces Tremaine was and wasn't responsible for as a creative director, I will always regard streetwear as an outlet for those whom are fighting for their identity, whether thats in school, transitioning to adulthood, holding onto your youth, or making your cultural values heard materially. I love some post-denim tears stussy stuff and most of it is the stuff that they really go all in on quality wise like the MMW loro piana denim stuff. otherwise I don't like this deadlock where everything feels formulaic retroactive to 3 years ago. What has streetwear made clear about itself in the past 15 months statement-wise outside of people liking house slippers more? And who better to make a statement than the people behind some of the most politically-charged work in streetwear recently? If I'm riffing off on ktt im opening a dialogue, not looking to win an argument so to speak. the culture that stussy is in many ways at the helm of is responsible for influencing many people's character and interests. Dismissing criticism of Stussy being on cruise control is not beneficial if the community seeks to sustain itself as an area for people to fight for the ways in which they seek to express themselves. And without being reductive the streetwear/fashion community is lacking specific criticisms or rebuttals outside of hating supreme, collabs, Virgil, and advocating for sustainability.
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He ain't no c***tho
Man always has something interesting to say regardless of whether I agree or not, I'mma come back to this post later
Stussy went from frat bros wearing they’re world tour tanks to wearing rayon camp shirts now
i aint never seen a frat bro in stussy or any cool brand
i aint never seen a frat bro in stussy or any cool brand
maybe it’s a regional thing/what they do where he lives
i aint never seen a frat bro in stussy or any cool brand
white frat bro’s from my college era def weren’t wearing streetwear or anything cool
but tbh I could see current frat bro’s being more into fashion/wearing stussy and s*** now that being into fashion is mainstream and not “gay” and the cool thing for straight guys to be into n s***
That edit
lolll I’m tryna not to be so negative in life man but s*** just too easy
I'm still with the rest of my post though 😤
@fiveprestos my bad on the delay, imma get to it eventually
lolll I’m tryna not to be so negative in life man but s*** just too easy
But you're trying and that's the foundation
i aint never seen a frat bro in stussy or any cool brand
Really I remember going to ACL like I’m 2013 or 14 and seeing a lot of guys in stussy tanks I’m guessing they would get them at zumiez
Btw just got my psych vest from the mail this s*** is nice I need more vest’s this year
Damn we made it to 200, gonna link this thread to my college professor who said I would never amount to anything
white frat bro’s from my college era def weren’t wearing streetwear or anything cool
but tbh I could see current frat bro’s being more into fashion/wearing stussy and s*** now that being into fashion is mainstream and not “gay” and the cool thing for straight guys to be into n s***
s*** even now, frat guys over here still wear short shorts and button ups or they wear vineyard vines and tylers or whatever it's called
i don't think they on even the most basic of streetwear yet but it prob do vary by region
Really I remember going to ACL like I’m 2013 or 14 and seeing a lot of guys in stussy tanks I’m guessing they would get them at zumiez
that would make sense
Damn we made it to 200, gonna link this thread to my college professor who said I would never amount to anything
Sharrap