Edit; I’m not asking what the 90s were like because I was there. I’m thinking what the pastiche of the 90s would be like should it have a revival like the 80s one that is nothing like the real 1980s by young people that presumably only have vague ideas from magazines and music and movies to go by. Like for example if it takes off from grunge but not like it was then but like it is idealised by kids today, what would it be like? What else was a 90s thing? Boy bands and indie pop mixed together on MTV? Hardcore techno and jungle/dnb with it’s own analogue distribution channels by mail, flyers, mixtapes? Last generation of B-movies with practical effects shot on film before that part of the industry degraded into C-tier on digital with terrible CGI in the 00s? Mainstream pop culture, whatever that was? Television and radio, magazines and records before the internet took off? How would any or all of that be reimagined by people that didn’t live it back then? I had no interest then nor do I have today for fashion magazines so if somebody knows I’d love to hear your twist on the topic.

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Depends on which part of the 90s. That whole “deep space nine” color palette was huge in the early 90s — lots of maroons and mustards and dark grays.

    • orbitz@lemmy.ca
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      1 month ago

      Not saying wrong but that movie came out in '99, so I think a retro of the 90s would be closer to mid to early 90s since there’s that bleed over to the early '00 decade. Of course I’m older so maybe that part would be included, just more considered it 00s era.

      Since I didn’t comment otherwise I’ll mention Xtreme sports, frosted hair colours, and some neon bleed over (though not cyberpunk levels) from the 80s for a 90s retro.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    1 month ago

    It’s kind of earlier, but a little bit would be casette futurism.

    https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CassetteFuturism

    A technological aesthetic reminiscent of mid-1970s to late 1990s tech (regardless of the real-time setting of the media) as codified by early microcomputers like the Altair 8800 and the IBM Personal Computer, late Cold War era technology, the iconic imagery of the mid to late space race, or the post-Cold War “end of history” period in The '90s, which was characterized by a fascination with virtual reality technologies (such as helmets) and 2D computer animation.

    Whether it be the bold colors and geometric shapes, the tendency towards stark plainness, or the exotic-looking computers and proto-cell phones, it is clear that this is neither the Raygun Gothic of days past nor the Everything Is an iPod in the Future aesthetic that would follow, but a bridging point that contains elements of both styles.

    Amazingly, nobody appears to have done a Wikipedia page for cassette futurism yet, or I’d link to that.

    • D1G17AL@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      That’s mostly synthwave aesthetic. Synthwave covers that same sort of stylistic convention as cassette futurism.

  • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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    1 month ago

    The same way 90s kids learned to dress like earlier generations. We learned it from the movies and TV reruns. We learned to dress like 50s greasers from Grease. We got our 60s and 70s hippy fashion sense from Cheech and Chong.

    Grungy Hacker chic: See movies like Hackers (duh), Strange Days, The Matrix, Fight Club, The Crow, Blade, The Fifth Element, Tank Girl, etc. Tight fits. (You can spot the squares in this aesthetic by their baggy tracksuit fits). Lots of dark and dirty retro futurism stuff. Deliberate splashes of vibrant colors if anything other than black. Lots of strange materials you wouldn’t normally consider clothing. Did they literally pick that accessory out of the trash? Maybe. Eyeliner on everyone, even the boys, especially the sad boys. Big black boots.

    For more normal stuff, see the fashions in Weekend at Bernies, Wayne’s World, Airheads, Bill and Ted’s Excellent and Bogus Journeys, Go, Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Clerks, Friday, Point Break, My Cousin Vinny, White Men Can’t Jump, Bad Boys, Clueless, Empire Records, etc. Lots of baggy fits. Lots of flannel, usually layered over a T-shirt. Ripped Jeans. Mostly muted subdue colors, with occasional splashes of virbancy, like a loud tie on a brown suit. Big and often long hair on the boys (and no beards). Sneakers. Tracksuits. Typing this out, these styles seem way too real and not all that exaggerated.

    And then very briefly, there was a flash of retro swing revival and everyone wanted to dress like Jim Carey in The Mask.

    I guess younger imitators might try to throw all these styles in a blender and see what comes out. Flannel Goths. Bubblegum Neon Hackers. Zoot Track Suits. Ripped Jeans and literally garbage. No clothes at all, just rocking boots and their cyber deck/stim-suit like a princess from Mars as written by William Gibson.

  • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Depends on a couple things. 90’s then or what we think of the 90’s now?

    Also, first half or second half. Because basically, the internet. The internet really wasn’t a thing in peoples homes for the first half of the 90’s. That became a thing starting around 95, and became pretty much ubiquitous by the year 2000.

    The early 90’s were basically the 80s. The later half was like, grunge, pop-punk, early internet.

    • whaleross@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      Not how it was or how we remember it. The nineties idealised and reimagined according to what it should be like to be considered cool and interesting today, presumably by people that are too young to have lived through the doc martens and jeans and cigarette smoke that it really was.

    • whaleross@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 month ago

      I’m thinking that vaporwave is a niche glitch aesthetics spinoff from the dial up experience.