What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (2024)

Table of Contents
Indie sleaze Scene Twee

Y2Kwas the main character of thespring 2022 collections. From low-rise jeans to baby tees to the mini-est of mini skirts, the look that had been dominatingGen ZTikTok and Instagram archive accounts made its way onto the runways and into campaigns and editorials. While little is left to be said about the fashion, be it its skimpiness or its skinniness, it’s worth noting that the Y2K trend was avidly embraced. Many of us had seen it all before, but considering the loungewear and athleisure we were all living in during the pandemic, high-octane millennium glam felt fresh.

Now, though, with thespring 2023 collectionsapproaching, Y2K is starting to feel a little played out. How many times can we see baby tees with crystal logos, cargo pants, and lowrise jeans on a runway and call them new? The question is: What’s next?

My best guess is that it’ll be something we’ve seen before. A somewhat made-up but eerily accurate rule states that fashion’s cyclicality sees trends resurface around 20 years after their initial runs. It was true for Y2K, and it was true for ’90s grunge when it came back via Tumblr in the early 2010s. So, here I am placing bets on what comes after Y2K. If you’re still with me, read on to take a trip down memory lane (or to a land of new discoveries, if you’re younger than, let’s say, 20).

Indie sleaze

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (1)

It’s 2008, “I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor” by the Arctic Monkeys is playing on your iPod. You’re wearing ripped tights with worn-out Converse and a big band tee (from Urban Outfitters, not true vintage) cut into a tank with vertiginously deep armholes. Your friend is sporting gold lamé leggings from American Apparel with a tiny dress vest and a skinny scarf. You’re on MySpace, but then start pulling up photos by Mark Hunter, akaThe Cobrasnake, to see what your favorite celebrities are wearing. You see party pics where Katy Perry and Taylor Swift are in the crowd, next to maybe Kanye West or perhaps Tavi Gevinson.

Circa 2006 to 2013, the cool-girl aestheticIndie Sleaze reigned supreme. Characterized by a grimy, chaotic mishmash of hipster fashion, ’80s maximalism, and ’90s grunge, Indie Sleaze was lo-fi and DIY but above all hedonistic. It was deeply tied to party culture (and to some values and romanticised aesthetics we have thankfully moved past from).

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (2)

The aesthetic has started to make the rounds on TikTok, with Gen Z ironically leaning into millennial aesthetics before falling for them completely. (Isn’t that how we ended up with Y2K?) Gen Z is loving wired headphones and compact flash cameras in the same way we used to love vinyl records and Polaroid cameras back then.

Can it be any coincidence that The Cobrasnake has just released a book with Rizzoli featuring his photos from the time? Or that The Weeknd and Lily-Rose Depp are about to star inThe Icon,a new HBO Max series billed as “the sleaziest love story in all of Hollywood”? Dirty is in again, kids, it’s just high-glam and highly performed now.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (3)
What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (4)
What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (5)

Scene

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (6)

Neon-colored skinny jeans, matching Converse, a pair of shutter shades (yeah,thosesunnies made popular by Ye, who went by Kanye back in the day). What a time it was to watch the Scene kids live their best lives.

Scene was a subculture that started in the early aughts and became popular through the mid- and late-2000s. While it’s often confused withEmo, and some portions of the aesthetic (particularly the hairstyles) do intersect, Scene kids orTrendieswere different. They were into hyperpop, pop punk, crunkcore, and bands like 3OH!3 (cueing up “Don’t Trust Me” as I type). The jeans were skinny, the t-shirts were tight, and the patterns clashed. Eyeliner was thick, belts were studded, and hair wasveryflat and typically spiked and swooped to the side. Scene fashion eventually became mainstream, with groups like the Jonas Brothers adopting some of the styles and the likes of LMFAO popularizing the colors and prints that Trendies were pulling off.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (7)

Ten-plus years later, the Jonas Brothers are back, Machine Gun Kelly is embodying the halfway point between a Trendie and an Emo kid, and TikTok e-girls and e-boys are dyeing their hair with the same colored streaks Scene kids were back then. The current male TikToker haircut is basically one blowout away from being the scene kid side swoop. Brands are embracing loud patterns and getting behind the same bright colors we once pushed aside in favor of minimal neutrals. We’re pretty much there.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (8)

Twee

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (9)

The sentence “Zooey Deschanel in 2013” is Twee to a T. For those unfamiliar, Twee is a British term for “excessively or affectedly quaint, pretty, or sentimental,” and the aesthetic is marked by whimsy and quirky childishness. It’s cleaned up, buttoned up, and innocent, almost the polar opposite of Indie Sleaze.

Fashion-wise, think peplums, Peter Pan-collar shirts, pearl necklaces, flared skirts, and tiny bows. Taylor Swift was Twee in 2012 when she used to dress like a “1950s housewife” (her words, not mine). And Alexa Chung was the poster child for British Twee when she was dating Alex Turner, the lead singer of Arctic Monkeys. It was a love affair between Twee and Indie Sleaze.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (10)

Matthew Williams recently put peplums in his spring 2022 ready-to-wear collection for Givenchy, and#tweehas 108 million views on TikTok (way over the 23.9 million#indiesleazehas racked up). As both menswear and womenswear become more fluid, we’re bound to see counter proposals in the form of gender aesthetics, and Twee is ripe for the taking.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (11)
What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (12)
What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (13)

Aesthetics diversified after the first Y2K. With social media sites like MySpace and Hi5 offering windows into other people’s style choices (sorry kids, this is pre-Facebook/Meta, it’s giving digital history), fashion bifurcated endlessly into what are now the myriad of –corelabeled aesthetics we consume on TikTok. After the current Y2K fad, fashion isn’t likely to settle on one aesthetic, but keep on splitting into multiple different ones. Of course, the thing about fashion is that it’s always a choice, so go ahead and choose your own adventure.

This story was originally published on Vogue.com.

What comes after Y2K? Vogue lists our predictions (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Delena Feil

Last Updated:

Views: 5580

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Delena Feil

Birthday: 1998-08-29

Address: 747 Lubowitz Run, Sidmouth, HI 90646-5543

Phone: +99513241752844

Job: Design Supervisor

Hobby: Digital arts, Lacemaking, Air sports, Running, Scouting, Shooting, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Delena Feil, I am a clean, splendid, calm, fancy, jolly, bright, faithful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.