👕 🏇🏻⛵️2000s answer to old money 🧥🏌️‍♂️⚓️

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 93

  • @realSimoneCherie
    @realSimoneCherie Před 5 měsíci +58

    Something about British upper class. Trench coats, tweed. Trousers and loafers, knits, neutrals are so strangely comforting

  • @dimplesd8931
    @dimplesd8931 Před 6 měsíci +130

    Gen X black southern preppy here. I love how classic prep is. The first “quiet luxury”. We were huge RL and Lacoste fans. I also still rock with Lilly Pulitzer. That brand has never been scared of color. ❤

    • @virginiagrundman4012
      @virginiagrundman4012 Před 6 měsíci

      I agree.

    • @marissashantez6051
      @marissashantez6051 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Yeah, but the super low rise thing is just too hard to pull off.

    • @amycortez3289
      @amycortez3289 Před 4 měsíci +4

      ​@@marissashantez6051 I'm a Southern preppy, Gen X or Xennial, depending who you ask. Low rise is not required! I wear high waisted, wide leg chinos. So comfortable, and a look that harkens back to Katherine Hepburn. A genuine, athletic, New England prep.
      Preppy style doesn't have to be 2000s preppy. Preppy is timeless. Find your fit and make it your own!

    • @marissashantez6051
      @marissashantez6051 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@amycortez3289 That sounds gorgeous. I love the bright colors of the 2000 Preppy look, but as for the fit, what you are describing sounds more elegant and timeless. After all; The waist of the garment should be on the waist of the human. Thats why they call it the waist. And of course there is no one who exemplifies quiet luxury better then Katherine Hepburn.

    • @lolo_bird
      @lolo_bird Před 3 měsíci

      Hi Carlton!

  • @margschne6601
    @margschne6601 Před 6 měsíci +53

    That sent me back to my high school years. I was a lonely goth among a lot of preps (or those emulating the style). I hated it at the time because it definitely meant to signify „I’m better/richer/smarter than you“ in every way possible. These people were normal middle class people but they engaged in horse riding, sailing and the likes. They called themselves „polos“. People actually wore pearl earrings and boat shoes with low rise pants (dark wash of course) and cropped polos or breton tops. Burberry indeed was everywhere. There was some overlap with the contemporary hiphop culture in that it sported luxury items and made use of white and light pink a lot.
    Now that I’m older, it’s still not for me but I can appreciate the minimalism and steadiness of the style.

  • @carolinerussell9556
    @carolinerussell9556 Před 5 měsíci +12

    There was actually a quiet-ish revival of a preppy style subculture in the mid to late 2010s on Tumblr after the financial crisis dust had settled. Lots of "Southern XYZ" t-shirt brands popped up around this time and this was also when Kiel James Patrick's brand took off.

  • @mariamart_0
    @mariamart_0 Před 6 měsíci +33

    This is such a mind opening analysis and moment of a elitist but upper middle class and generational wealth aesthetic…
    I 🧡 the analysis and presentation of this social commentary and video essay format…
    It is so interesting and educational!

  • @readyfxrtheweekendx
    @readyfxrtheweekendx Před 6 měsíci +15

    so interesting how the entire aesthetic is rooted in English styles- I had no idea! would love to see more videos on southern prep, as someone who only gets to wear trench coats once a year lol

    • @kakonthebed
      @kakonthebed Před 15 dny

      To me it’s more interesting that the entire style is rooted in a lot of Indian garments and patterns

  • @KerriisaDarling
    @KerriisaDarling Před 5 měsíci +8

    I grew up in an affluent suburb right outside of Boston. And in the eighties preppy was huge! Everyone there wore polos, rugbys. My 4th grade pic I had an argyle vest on with a mini skirt! And this was 1984!! The girls were tretorn o keds sneakers LLVean jackets and backpacks . Classic styles always come back every 10 years that’s why we are seeing it done again now.

  • @deadsirius3531
    @deadsirius3531 Před 5 měsíci +8

    I'm not sure how I stumbled into your videos as I am a young Gen Xer and have never in my life cared or thought much about fashion, but I'm finding these videos oddly fascinating and educational. Hope to eventually see more on the early-mid 90s as that was my own adolescence but it's all really interesting

  • @chiara1194
    @chiara1194 Před 6 měsíci +10

    I’m an old millennial from Virginia (Class of 2002); I will NEVER grow out of my 2000s preppy phase. Thankfully, it will never go out of style.

  • @georgiaviolitzi1514
    @georgiaviolitzi1514 Před 6 měsíci +14

    Very interesting video, very good job! What I find really interesting is how the upper classes appropriate what is labour class attire in a need to appear simple and non pretentious and then companies come up, brand the styles and the labour class buy the expensive version trying to imitate upper class and to fit in. It's the same story in many cases. And I find it frustrating. Does anybody else see the pattern?

    • @Ikaros23
      @Ikaros23 Před 5 měsíci

      The real reason is because the upper class want to look different than the more insecure middle class. So the UC imitate the working class knowing this will confuse the middle class for many many years 😂

  • @SarA-wr4hk
    @SarA-wr4hk Před dnem

    I'll never give up ballerina flats. I'm pairing them with wide legged pleated pants this summer and it's awesome.

  • @williamkazak469
    @williamkazak469 Před rokem +18

    Excellent video presentation and discussion. Something for everyone in this aesthetic. I am fond of nautical themes and also polo sporting themes. RL print ads have always inspired me. So believable, as if I could be a part of the scene in the ad.

  • @sarahsarahsarah9093
    @sarahsarahsarah9093 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I’m convinced my love for preppy style (specifically “Ivy League” preppy, not American Eagle preppy lol) in high school stemmed from getting tween fashion catalogs in middle school - I was obsessedddd with their back to school editions. The plaid, the sweaters, the tall socks had me transfixed lmao probably because I’m from Louisiana and you can’t even think about wearing a sweater until well into November and even then you’ll probably have to take it off by the afternoon!

  • @EnesiM
    @EnesiM Před 5 měsíci +9

    Visually the look can be fun but I think the popularisation through shows like gossip girl and the O.C. etc spread this false mindset that identifying and empathising with filthy rich people and normalising extreme hoarding of resources by a few over the well being of many, was somehow going to make us transcend into the upper class as well, further marginalising and creating apathy towards the majority of the population on this planet who is poor, working or middle class. And the preppy dressing style supported these beliefs…

  • @malik_alharb
    @malik_alharb Před rokem +29

    Underrated channel

  • @alexiamoreland992
    @alexiamoreland992 Před 6 měsíci +19

    I grew up working class and graduated high school in 2004. I could've never afforded a lot of brands mentioned (although they definitely weren't my style anyway), but inexpensive polo shirts and rugby jerseys mixed with pop punk style and some bling thrown in was *chefs kiss*.

  • @veiledviolet
    @veiledviolet Před 6 měsíci +13

    I looove your videos. I’m bummed this didn’t include Abercrombie and fitch or Hollister though. That was a huge staple in socal during my teen years and therefore very nostalgic to me.

    • @Okidokiartisjoki
      @Okidokiartisjoki Před 6 měsíci +5

      She did (briefly, though) mention A&F around 2:40

  • @clairewillow6475
    @clairewillow6475 Před 6 měsíci +3

    The OC was my favourite show, I just ADORED Marissa ❤

  • @DMshell17
    @DMshell17 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Suburban middle class prep was REALLY into old navy flip flops 😂

  • @stellamaxwell777
    @stellamaxwell777 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Very good analysis! Some errors in wording, but overall ver accurate. I would say that this style continued into the 2010 among the demographic the style was made for even if it fell out of fashion to the greater public. I wonder if it’s still popular now though, in its most obnoxious iteration I mean, as most people I know have chosen to moderate their style to be more neutral in the age of social media and edgier in order to fit in with city life as you do in your 20s and 30s. I feel like $600 linen embroidered dresses have been popular with this group for the last decade over Lilly Pulitzer, especially once Lilly made everything neon and lowered its quality by going for polyester instead of its traditional cotton/silk fabrics and reducing their embroidery as well. I would be happy if this aesthetic return, can’t lie.

    • @carolinerussell9556
      @carolinerussell9556 Před 5 měsíci +1

      In the same vein but instead of Lilly Pulitzer, I feel like preppy women now are going for brands and designers using colorful fabric from India to make cotton sundresses, e.g. Sue Sartor, Madison Mathews, Banjanan, Oliphant-esque dresses. Also Hill House definitely fills the Lilly-shaped trend void.

  • @Lucys_art_and_stuff
    @Lucys_art_and_stuff Před 2 měsíci +1

    I feel like analysis of the fairy grunge style that was popular a few years ago would be interesting

  • @Mairena12
    @Mairena12 Před 5 měsíci +2

    20:42 so proud of my boy pete doherty: fashion icon, rockstar, and character development for kate moss

  • @lips2173
    @lips2173 Před 11 měsíci +5

    lovee this video and ur channel its so interesting to see where are these pieces of clothing even derive from and evolve into something different esp the "preppy" aesthetic is very popular with preteens with their version of "preppy" thats not very gossip girl-esque but with very very bright colors which reminds me of the colors i saw in ur analysis

  • @broken-lycan
    @broken-lycan Před rokem +13

    I'm watching all your vids and I really love you incorporate each aesthetic you're talking about into the category title images :D

  • @phillyblaze777
    @phillyblaze777 Před 6 měsíci +3

    My favorite Aesthetic, so timeless. Great Video.

  • @clairewillow6475
    @clairewillow6475 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I think almost all of these are in style still except the riding boots over skinny jeans and the argyle sweaters.

  • @esikazemese
    @esikazemese Před 6 měsíci +5

    I just love the history class you make this videos into. THANK YOU! Love them

  • @TheLunablackheart
    @TheLunablackheart Před 6 měsíci +2

    I'm addicted to this channelllllll

  • @NGS93
    @NGS93 Před rokem +7

    My favourite. Would love to see a video on Ivy Style if its not too similar.

  • @jillhyndman9520
    @jillhyndman9520 Před rokem +4

    This is the best channel !

  • @shaunmeyer3202
    @shaunmeyer3202 Před 5 měsíci

    Great analysis, of Sportswear/Prep. As someone who was in High School and College in the 2000s, this video definitely describes a large part of my style, that I still follow today. I was big on American Eagle! However, I did shake it up with an Alternative Rock look at the same time! black t-shirts and Blue jeans depending on the situation and social group!😄

  • @SherryBerg
    @SherryBerg Před 2 měsíci

    So good. Best account. Thank you for putting in the time and effort for free content!! Can’t wait to watch you grow!

  • @clairewillow6475
    @clairewillow6475 Před 6 měsíci

    0:29 the outfit on the left looks so good

  • @lilacchocolate
    @lilacchocolate Před 6 měsíci +3

    Gosh, your videos are so well-researched and rich in content!!! Can't imagine how long each one takes you but bravo!!! 👏☺

  • @creepinwhileyousleepin
    @creepinwhileyousleepin Před 5 měsíci

    I’m kinda half preppy half gorp core and have been for a long time. All of its comfortable, functional, durable and timeless.

  • @ichiban_turko
    @ichiban_turko Před rokem +4

    this vid is awesome

  • @thedarkbaby
    @thedarkbaby Před 5 měsíci +4

    What happened to hollister and Abercrombie’s aesthetic

  • @LiNa-yl8qs
    @LiNa-yl8qs Před měsícem

    Thank you so much for this gorgeous video and collection! ❤

  • @margareteedithottilieleonore
    @margareteedithottilieleonore Před 11 měsíci +6

    "ahh i'm so happy someone's made a f*cking video about this"

  • @latinaalma1947
    @latinaalma1947 Před 5 měsíci

    Very comprehensive...I had forgotten about how popular madras was....

  • @janedoe4305
    @janedoe4305 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I friggin h4te polo shirt cut😂😂😂 they look nice on me, but it's the trauma of working in restaurant industry that it's associated with for me.

  • @susanbuckley4153
    @susanbuckley4153 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Excellent video…. Love it!

  • @grumpyschnauzer
    @grumpyschnauzer Před 6 měsíci +14

    As a minority, I thought it strange that some of the clothes here originated by British upper class but worn by various minority groups were not seen as appropriating white culture even though the reversal is to accuse whites of appropriating other cultures. Can we just normalize it's common to borrow and influence each other's styles?

    • @tula1433
      @tula1433 Před 6 měsíci +9

      I’ve been saying the same for years. My boyfriend is a cowboy. Like literally a ranch hand. All of his “gear” is now being worn in rap videos. Camo, work wear, neon Orange construction colors etc 🦺 No one ever screams about cultural appropriation. Cultures were meant to be SHARED. We literally used to TRADE! People would trade silk for spices, metals for leathers and so on!! That’s what makes the world beautiful. I don’t like the modern woke way of viewing all white people as one way, and all minorities as another. There was literally cannibalism happening during the Holimodor, and the Great Depression affected all races. So tired of hearing “old white men” used as a slur, for men who literally starved, started working at 12, then got shipped off to two wars!!! Culture needs to be shared. Nuance is needed! It’s not black and white! Literally!

    • @LizzylovesLobo
      @LizzylovesLobo Před 5 měsíci +7

      2 responses to this 1- not all outfits are necessarily “culture”, im mexican but i dont consider many aspects of chicano street style my “culture” right like we can agree theres a distinction between a culturally important aspect of adoration/attire and a style that just happens to originate from a certain ethnic group and 2- cultural appropriation can not work the other way around (“reverse racism”) because at least in the US, “White” American culture (“WASP” culture) is the predominant culture, more specifically the predominant culture of those in positions of power. so for example, someone white who is from “wasp” culture can wear their hair in braids (it would probably fall out lmao but thats besides the point) for an instagram post and then take them out for a job interview and have hair that is “socially acceptable” to the interviewer, but someone who has coily hair has braids because its a protective hairstyle for coily hair and cant just be white again for a job interview. That is why styles can be taken from the predominant culture and not be “appropriating” anything because at the end of the day that is what is seen as “acceptable” by those in positions of power (last note this tangent is all US centric)

  • @virginiagrundman4012
    @virginiagrundman4012 Před 6 měsíci +8

    No one in our class wears anything with a logo. If you know, you know. My God, ive seen people wearing Burberry iconic market check jackets, trousers....shoes!! Polo shirts with huge iconic polo!! True wealth is QUIET.

  • @Desiree-Laine
    @Desiree-Laine Před 6 měsíci +1

    Loved this.👍🥰

  • @alletsnow
    @alletsnow Před 4 měsíci +1

    Andre 3000 prep wasn’t conservative prep. It was more ‘ironic prep’ than conformist. He plays with his clothes and has amazing style.

  • @itswhatitis277
    @itswhatitis277 Před 6 měsíci +3

    So funny how you used so many pics of Kate and Pippa Middleton. They are the epitome of new rich and british upper class often have mocked them for trying too hard to look old money. That signet ring Pippa wears is with the literally new Middleton coat of arms created in 2012... most Eurpean nobility can trace their lineage back to the 13th century or more!

  • @SunxSurfxSand
    @SunxSurfxSand Před 11 měsíci +2

    You put so much work into tellers videos. Are you a fashion student ?

  • @southkingable
    @southkingable Před 3 měsíci

    Excellent!

  • @SavageLife84
    @SavageLife84 Před 4 měsíci

    Ralph is the best Brooks in second place and Burberry, don’t forget Tommy Hilfiger especially in the 90s but he’s back now and his designs are awesome but his quality can be better..

  • @seabreeze4559
    @seabreeze4559 Před 6 měsíci +6

    re Tweed: war rationing. Leather patches were also due to rationing and these were WW1 veterans re-drafted into teaching out of retirement. It's extremely crass to wear leather arm patches unless you've served in the military in some capacity but even then, tryhard since we aren't on rationing anymore. Wearing tweed when you didn't grow up in the countryside is also crass, worst of all to wear in cities like London (no brown in town) since it's for leisure like shooting not work. It also has an ammo pocket so anti-hunting people cannot wear it, we make fun of them because it's like a vegan in leather. It has nothing to do with Sherlock Holmes, during the Hound of the Baskervilles, he was blending in wearing tweed in the middle of nowhere, it was like camo. Detectives blend in. In England, if you own an estate it's typically farmland (like Mr Darcy) so wearing farmer fabric makes sense because again, you dress like the other staff, it's a work uniform so people wearing tweed to show off is a bit like someone randomly dressing like a waiter or McDonald's staff to act like they own the restaurant. Stupid and confusing, they don't own an estate, have no staff and didn't go to the right schools so no outfit they wear ever matters. The pattern also covers any bird sh-t reasonably well, boots are brown due to mud and manure. If wearing black, we cannot see where to clean it off! You NEVER mix city and country outfits in one (RL styling is terrible and laughable) and you don't wear a larpy farm girl outfit unless you are from there e.g. cottagecore cringe. Worst are the people who claim to dress like Hobbits (Rachel Maksy, for one) who dress like our alcoholic crazy uncle and act cringe thinking it's cute. We think womanchild who refuses to grow up, like Peter Pan. That is not what young people wear in the countryside. We are NOT against looking sexy, we also don't want lyme disease. It's a precarious balancing act. Ancestral paintings bless you, another person's curse you. It isn't "largely a white aesthetic". The Kennedys are NOT WASP. It's literally a race and religion. Irish Catholics don't even count! Poor people in England wear it too, the whole point was a countersignal after WW2 to dress like the working class of the time!

  • @Ivy3nj0yer
    @Ivy3nj0yer Před 6 měsíci +1

    Very well done overall. No mention of the knit tie, though?

  • @queen-estherobasi4086
    @queen-estherobasi4086 Před 20 dny

    Can someone tell me the season of the fashion show seen @23:08?

  • @21cgIN
    @21cgIN Před 5 měsíci

    7:00 Oxford is not an Ivy League university

  • @UnfinishedSwing
    @UnfinishedSwing Před 5 měsíci

    It was so bad ohgawd I'm glad preppy style is over. Old money style will always be superior ❤

    • @julianpletl3061
      @julianpletl3061 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Old money is just a newer and less colourful/extravagant version of preppy in the post covid recession anxiety in the 2020s

    • @UnfinishedSwing
      @UnfinishedSwing Před 5 měsíci

      I entirely disagree although I respect your opinion ​@julianpletl3061

  • @seabreeze4559
    @seabreeze4559 Před 6 měsíci +2

    As a WASP 1. most of us are not rich. 2. we mostly dress so we don't freeze 3. you're supposed to wear your skin colour, so RL not making brown polo shirts is kinda sus.

  • @howardturner2905
    @howardturner2905 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Prep then, prep now. I aspire to the clothing style, not the lifestyle.

  • @bia2moureira677
    @bia2moureira677 Před 8 měsíci +2

    What is the name of the films and series that appear in this video (besides Gossip Girl, Clueless , White Chicks , Sex in the city😅) please?

    • @nofancypants
      @nofancypants Před 6 měsíci

      I saw a few...the OC, the hills, indiana jones and raiders of the lost ark, high school musical, legally blonde...

  • @Imxel21
    @Imxel21 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Just to clarify ‘coconut girl’ is a slur towards people from the pacific islands

  • @MrOdsplut
    @MrOdsplut Před 11 měsíci +14

    "Ivy League universities like Oxford" wtf lmao

  • @NormieNeko
    @NormieNeko Před 5 měsíci

    I disagree with others. I dislike this aesthetic. I can appreciate "classic" pieces, but "prep" doesn't do it for me. Then again, I'm not upper middle class. I guess it's due to the so-called "douchey fratboy" and "bitchy preppy girl" behaviors I saw in entertainment and in real life. I suppose I spent too much time as a scene girl when I was young, and then I accepted the fact that I can't get away from being a blue-collar country girl (but I don't always look the part).
    Rather than the refined look of European horseback riding, I'm more like American cowboys vs indians wild style of horseback riding (I'm at least truly half Amerindian). My personal aesthetic is Farmcore Coquette, apparently (that was fun figuring out). As reserved and stiff as I am, I am not elegant nor refined, and I have no interest in being so. I fear the return of the acceptance of stuck up and entitled attitudes that I saw in the 2000s with the role play of either east coast or west coast upper class elitism by the middle class. Then again, it probably ends when I log out, lol.

  • @wmurd
    @wmurd Před 6 měsíci

    14:17 it can't be 35000, I think you misspell 3500

  • @mikewinston8709
    @mikewinston8709 Před 5 měsíci

    Let’s be honest….its all copies of the British. Look at current film footage of King Charles III. Thank goodness for Eton and Oxford from the 1500’s……

  • @bluBlaq33
    @bluBlaq33 Před 11 měsíci +9

    I hate this aesthetic but found it’s history interesting and fascinating…still hate it.

  • @steve19811
    @steve19811 Před rokem +2

    It creates a boat load of envy and resentment when in fact someone has to represent high culture/conservative values/ and attractive white people....

    • @tula1433
      @tula1433 Před 6 měsíci +2

      No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.-Eleanor Roosevelt 🇺🇸 ❤

  • @colleensainsbury9022
    @colleensainsbury9022 Před měsícem

    What is so shameful about loving an asethetic that suits your colouring and is part of your cultural heritage? I doubt most people walk around using their clothes as a political statement. Some styles just suit how you look and what you love more than others.