Gen Z gals love what’s on top: bras.
And she’s bringing back the risqué “bra over shirt” style, which she wears to show off her breasts.
“It’s an indie-inspired mix of New York grunge and ’90s hip-hop,” says vintage reseller Emma Logue, adding that newly discovered pre-Y2K fashion is causing temperatures to rise this fall. spoke to the Post about the trend.
“Grunge girls are tossing bras they find in well-meaning trash cans over badly torn vintage T-shirts and baggy jeans,” says a man in his 20s who owns Rogue Thrift Shop on the Lower East Side. continued. Her employees, Bridget Coe, 24, and Sophia Romulo, 20, spilled cups on their shirts or dropped them on their shirts in a trendy demonstration of defiance.
However, this backwards outfit has received severe backlash from cyber trolls who deemed the look “stupid” and “stupid”.
But keyboard criticism can’t seem to contain the Z Team’s wild style.
“We’re in an age of fashion insecurity,” Logue said with a laugh. “Gen Z is revolting, probably because of the election.”
The recent boom in underwear as outerwear mania, the bra-over-shirt phenomenon needs no explanation. Eyeful needs no introduction.
The lecherous look, which snubs society’s modesty, is a punkish product of the grunge fashion movement, an “anything goes” aesthetic that swept through the anarchist avant-garde in the mid-1990s.
Emerging from the shadows of late 20th century subculture to mainstream runways thanks to couturier Marc Jacobs, the design-disturbed style is being reimagined by trendy tastemakers with a penchant for provocation.
Vixen VIPs such as supermodel Kendall Jenner, 29, and social media sensation Dixie D’Amelio, 23, have been spotted wearing the trending turvy look, which goes bra first. are.
High-profile figures like influencer Isabelle Tan wore lace-knit Michael Kors bodysuits and revealing bras at the designer’s spring/summer show during New York Fashion Week in September. I wore it and showed it off.
And she wasn’t alone.
Trendsetters with flashy flair also took the city by storm, displaying their indescribable glamor amidst the upscale NYFW buzz.
But YouTube beauty Emma Chamberlain, 23, raised the bar during Paris Fashion Week last February.
The popular pin-up wore a cherry-colored bra over a beige T-shirt at the Acne Studios show, tucking it into the bra’s cups to reveal her taut torso.
And online villain Zoomer has similarly dirty underwear.
TikTok content creator Christina extolled “a woman’s urge to wear a cute bra over her shirt” in a recent video. The funky fashionista rocked a tiny black bra over a white T-shirt, which she teamed with a striped button-up shirt, baggy denim jeans, a thick black belt, and distressed sneakers.
Freelance artist Catriona, 25, also showed virtual fans her Look at Me outfit, posing in a white and yellow top and a sexy see-through black bra.
“One thing about me,” the brunette captioned her clip. “I love wearing a bra over a shirt.”
New York clothing store Tasha loves this look so much that she hand-sewed a black bra over a white crew neck. The DIY fail is reminiscent of ready-to-wear label Vaquera’s $125 “Bra T-Shirt.” This is a short-sleeve product with a printed image of lace lingerie.
Philadelphia-based fashion plate Jess recently wowed the public by wearing a sexy bra from Rihanna’s Fenty It’s an edgy response to the redefinition of the Gen Z buzzword for chaotic cool girl.
I may be a brat, but not everyone is into the raunchy charm.
“In this style, ‘bra’ is ‘brat,'” Emmy Award-winning stylist Carson Kressley told the Post.
“So brat. Super brat. Total brat,” he raved before lowering the boom. “[But it’s] It’s just not a good idea. ”
of Currently trending The expert behind RuPaul’s Drag Race and Queer Eye says bras should be show and support, not flashy accessories.
“Call me old-fashioned,” Kressley said. “It’s a ‘don’t do’ fashion to me.” ”