I strongly believe social media has artificially inflated hype in terms of trends and what’s popular. Trends are fully capable of coming and going online before you even see them on someone in real life
Yep, veeeeery jealous of that pocket right now. Thinking that I once bought a wool winter coat with fake pockets. I thought they were just sewn shut ☠️
im still out here thinking i could make millions if i just create normal ass looking womens clothing that have normal sized or hidden pockets. why is no company doing that? are they afraid of losing their purse business?
@@Mr.Marbles it’s boring. No unique selling point. It’ll take time to penetrate the market. Good for a mature company with extra capital, for a new affordable line. Not good for a startup
@@amyx231 the unique selling point is that it has normal sized pockets. all the girls that heard the idea loved it. you would have to create some wild ads. i dont know, maybe some adventure where a girl is climbing on a mountain in normal ass clothes and then just pulls out a pickaxe out of her jeans pocket or someting. or a robber steals her purse and opens it an inside is just a photo of a middle finger and you can see how she has all her belongings in her pocket. and then make the clothes in good quality and not too wild, just regular. then when it gets bigger you can create more daring stuff. but i dont know, im no marketing expert and i wont start anything but i have this feeling this could work somehow.
I don't remember the last time I was this mesmerized by a youtube video, the way you talked about fashion and clothes being art is breathtaking. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and opinions in a fun, interesting and engaging way.
I think a big part of dissipating trends that you didn’t really get into is the fact that the first few times the public sees an item worn it will be placed with a complementary outfit. As that item becomes more popular we see it worn in ways that don’t complement the item as much and it starts to become a gaudy or cringey look in our eyes.
I think that's cause certain people wanna wear it in "never before seen" ways and look unique. Not every person wants to rock it the usual complementary way if that's what everyone else is doing.
Yes, especially when people try to bring things that work in some situations into places they don't seem to be. Like some of the styles that came from festivals don't really work for everyday wear. Especially as a lot of trends seem to work better in certain climates that not everyone has. I remember a few years ago when Timberland work boots were really in, but those didn't work for my friends in Florida where they'd be too warm for most of the year, and the crocheted top trend more recently doesn't work so well where I am in Canada as we only get a few hot days to wear them, unless it's a sweater.
I think another issue with trends is that they reach some sort of "icon"/iconic status for a certain (short) period of time, immediately rendering them outdated after it passes/it's oversaturated.
I love how down to earth you are and the clarity you provide for fashion. The movie example of how they will only make a few movies vs fashion output being higher in quantity so they're not as thoughtful with it generally -was really good.
I couldn’t follow a trend even if I wanted too. This shit is moving so rapidly I can’t and have no desire to keep up. I buy what I like and very few and far between. Anything I buy is done with intention, thought and purpose. I separate the omnipresent voice (social media) from my own and follow that one. I disconnected from social media completely around 2016-2017. So the only way to be forced feed was through direct influence or fast fashion stores pushing the trend. I do notice as a result people who follow trends religiously don’t particularly care for my fashion sense. My best friend is constantly critiquing everything I wear. And it’s usually negative but at least it inspires thought and that I love none the less. Great questions, great answers ❤
Agreed. I swear, I blink and then 5-6 different clothing trends go by. I have no idea what's popular and everything cycles so fast that all pieces of clothing ever will be en vogue eventually.
art that is created from a perspective of suffering is great. but its great because is powerful and expresses something real. Superficially creating a situation like that is not great because its not real. art is a tool to express. and expressing suffering is very powerful to subjects and important for the one expressing. if you are so lucky that you dont live suffering that doesn’t mean you cant make powerful art, it just means you are fortunate enough to not have to epress yourself emotionally in the same degree that someone who lives with suffering might. this opens a door to make philosophically powerful art.
I also believe that trends earn their value by newness, not by it's actual design, but then we also end up over exposed to these things that they become ugly and now we gotta move on to the next thing
The look of the Rick Owens store absolutely is hard and brutal and intimidating at first. But then I was looking at a gorgeous lizard skin bag that was in a glass case without a top on it and the sales associate said “go ahead and pick it up!” No bulky alarm on the bag or anything. Also every piece of furniture and art in the store is for sale. So you actually feel free to explore the rich variety of textures, materials, and forms that the store has to offer. I didn’t buy anything but left feeling extremely gratified. Check it out if you can!
The movie Frank combats the tortured artist myth. At the end of the film, a character asks Franks parents about how his mental illness helped his art. They’re shocked and say that it didn’t, it only ever hindered him, and that his creativity was always there before he developed an illness. I think this is really true. Tragedy often stops people from being the great artists they truly could be. The fact people go and search for it to improve their art is crazy to me.
Trends do suck. But I feel like for a lot of people they can be a useful lifeline in fashion. If someone is confident and sure enough of themselves to know what they like and not care what everyone else thinks about their wild outfit then that's great! That's how it should be, but I sure as hell wasn't when I first got into fashion. Incorporating some trendy elements into said wild outfit can make it feel a little safer to wear at all, and a little "YOOOO" now and then can be the confidence boost that motivates you to continue and evolve your style. Like little hype-y training wheels until some day you don't need them anymore. 🚲
Heck yeah I totally agree! Trends got me interested in fashion, but like you said, they are like training wheels. I don’t feel like I need them anymore, but without them, maybe I wouldn’t have gotten into fashion at all.
TH-camrs will tell you over and over “no that’s terrible never wear clothes for approval” are the same ones copying trends to gain approval from the TH-cam algorithm
Trends got me to try things, and then I kept what I liked. I still wear Crocs I got in middle school (2009 I think), and shoes with separate toes that were a trend in 2015. Although most of what I wear is more timeless styles with maybe something different like shoes, or a trendy print on something. I'm still learning how to style a pair of red leopard print cargo skinny jeans I got on clearance 2 years ago, but I still find they're cool and unique to play with, especially with a solid coloured sweater or something for winter, when no one would see a statement shirt under my coat.
@@yvnginfinity exactly. They're not genuinely loving clothes they show to us. They bought them or got from sponsors because they're attention w...res and care only about social approval. If they actually liked these things, they would wear them season after season.
For the purpose of fashion critics, id say that most people get passionated about something when other people talk about their passion. A really passionated car guy will make you interested in cars, your channel made me passionated with fashion, fantào chan’el made me passionated about music. Passion are the best thing ever, it treaches you to be happy with things you already had, before you where just seeing people in clothes everyday, now you walk on the streets and get hyped because someone wore a designer you love, before you were just on the highway bored, now you get happy with every car you see. Passion is appreciated the world around us by giving it lore, meaning, exclusivity. You are teaching other how to appreciate things better you are making people happier, maybe making them new friends, opening them to new visions Your are changing way more lives than someone recommending you what to buy
I think the "tortured artist" trope is romanticized far too much; I think that's gone a bit more by the wayside over the years as we shift as a society toward valuing mental health care. That said, latching onto the pain as a source of inspiration is kinda... ass-backwards, frankly. A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful, or at least compelling in some way; they don't seek out suffering in order to depict it. Art is a vehicle in which to flee suffering through self-expression, it isn't (or shouldn't be) a way to amplify suffering.
Think of Alexander McQueen. Lots of his early work is inspired by the trauma he experienced as a child. The press and buyers loved the results they see on the runways, so he pulls himself further down that route for more praise. It doesn't help that he's very protective over his work.
Yes!! The reality is that the majority of high quality art in the world was produced by people who were in a good spot in their lives at the time. The tragic stories get the most coverage, but just as with every other task we seek to do, when we are well rested, less stressed, etc, we tend to do a much better job than when we are in the throes of a depressive episode. As a creative person with mental health issues myself, I hate the notion that I should lean into my unhealthiness in order to thrive creatively. What a horribly dangerous idea. My former partner was in a similar boat to me, and was pushed by our peers toward this kind of thing a lot, which led him toward extremely dangerous and self destructive behaviors and eventually necessitated in the ending of our relationship. It’s such a horrible thing to encourage people to neglect their mental health. We’d never blatantly do that in any other context but for some reason in the creative world, we let it slide
Art doesn’t need to have anything to do with mental illness. You’re kinda perpetuating the big art lie when you say “A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful “ Wanna really know what great artists do with their pain? They do what regular people do with their pain ,harm themselves and the people around them!
"A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful, or at least compelling in some way; they don't seek out suffering in order to depict it." Excellently said. This is what a lot of ppl don't get. There's a big difference between using art to express your pain and inflicting pain on to do art.
Trendy fashion items are like that annoying song that you hear everywhere you go. You don't like it at first but it gets played so much that after a few days you start thinking you like it. Same with fashion, brands push a range ot items heavily and since you see them a few times a day, you kind of trick yourself into liking it
Or conversely there are songs you love but once you hear it a million times you never want to hear it again. Even if it's an an amazing song. For example, Nirvana's Smells like Teen Spirit. Its a great song but I could go the rest of my life without hearing it again.
I like how these videos feel like that conversation you have with that random person you met that you just clicked with instantly. now you're just having the most beautiful conversation about your thoughts upon things, but in this specific setting. it feels like im in class, but its like my favorite class though. if that makes sense.....
Bliss you should share as much as you’d like about your personal fashion bias’. It also gives us viewers more of an idea of where your critiques come from with your fashion reviews… also great point about about inflicting pain and suffering in art. Remember, Leonardo da Vinci was a very healthy strong social man .. artists don’t all have to fall victims to unhealthy unproductive toxicity from an idea of a “fallen angel” complex
I just wanted to say I was watching another fashion TH-camr and they were questioning the pronunciation of a certain designer and one the dudes was like “idk that’s how bliss foster says it so I’m going w that” and I think that’s really inspiring
Quick story related to Cohesion… last night I’m in my favorite Italian Restaurant, talking to the owners who I know fairly well. Their menu is limited and well curated, their interior is beautiful, and everything about them feels cohesive. I was surprised to learn that at home Sam, the owner and chef, has a passion for Asian inspired dishes, and variety. He wishes there was a way to share his culinary flexibility with his customers, but to offer this experience to his customers he’d have to remove himself from his duties and replace himself in the kitchen to be able to expand. It may just be human nature that we have an aversion to unlike collections of things and experiences, which gives way to creative editing and good ideas ending up on the cutting room floor, but as the saying goes “sometimes it’s better to ride the horse in the direction it’s going” and pick your design and marketing battles if it means giving your brand a chance to survive.
Bliss you are such a treasure. All of these answers are so on point and insightful. The stuff about the tortured artist was very powerfully articulated. Bless Bliss.
Im not even into fasion beyond styling (picking my own outfits in things my style or helping style a friend) but i wish i was so i could watch your content, youve got a dope camera personality!
Thanks so much for the kind words! I try to make this stuff accessible for everyone, even if they don’t keep up with the industry. If you’re interested in a good “next step” check out my video called “Balenciaga, Demna Gvasalia, and a World of Clones” 💫💫
I think the point of a fashion critic is to demystify the complexities of the brand and of the vision for the consumer. The people that want to understand the fashion, but dont have the time to research each and every brand and every one of their collections to understand something they love on a deeper level. It genuinely takes a seriously long time to get to know a brand with fashion when there are just so many options and people to get to know, time that they simply dont have. Also, noone wants to buy something thats super expensive and only then find out that they did something you seriously disagree with, or they have a stance that you personally dont stand for Also, which dover street is your favourite?
You nailed it 🦾 fully agree. ➖ My favorite DSM will always be NYC bc that was my first one. But I’ve only seen that one+London. Can’t wait to see the new set up in Paris when it’s finally open 💫💫
you remind me of my 6th grade english teacher. you two have exactly the same hair style and color....and the wire rimmed glasses are EXACTLY the same pair she had.. i loved her, she was awesome.
I really like your channel Bliss. Thanks for your honest thoughts on the tortured artist. My best writing came when I actively changed behaviors to heal certain parts of myself. I want to go on a field trip to all the stores you mentioned. I was amazed by the images alone!
As someone who has suffered a lot with mental illness over the course of my life, It has pushed me to make art and to express. But the quality of my art does not come from that. I make art to help escape those feelings and to be understood, not because its something to aspire to. If I could flick a switch tomorrow, Id have all of those feelings stripped from me and Id never look back.
Trends should not be followed as rules of the fashion game. I have discussed this with my fashion design student friends a lot. It is sad that some of them define their future brands as a bunch of trends mashed together. I think being fashionable is just dressing others and yourself with taste, balanced proportions, and identity. Just as you said, understanding one's personal style is more important than dancing by someone else's flute and wearing whatever other influencers are wearing. A lot of it comes from social media and needing to be liked. There are not a lot of brave people who have a core identity, and a sense of style who are discussing such things, so thanks :)
My mom always told us is "style and fashion are two completely different things" trends come and go, some things will look good forever. (Also my sister and I said we were glad we were poor when we were younger bc it's very few photos of us in clothes that just dive bombed out of the fashion conversation)
Well, I started to rewatch all Ann Demeulemeester collections starting from the first ones. And her first collections look more stylish, beautiful and modern than most of the clothes I see in shops this summer. That's incomprehensible for me. She was so ahead of her time creating same time timeless pieces.
I do not think that I have commented on a Bliss Foster video. But I have been so lucky to catch a cold 🤕🤒🥶🥵😵💫 I think that it’s the perfect time, to hop on to patreon. I need some lengthy deepdiving. Thank you for your humor and thank you for taking fashion seriously, even when it’s not. Greetings from Denmark 🇩🇰
I turn to fashion critics when I feel a strong reaction to a collection that I don’t understand. Sometimes it’s nice to dive into the details until you find exactly what you were connecting to in that moment.
And why is your work incredible? Because as you mentioned, despite the fact that I can see at a new look pretty much as soon as it hits the runway, your perspective broadens my understanding and instills in me greater appreciation for the creative process including the various inspirations… stuff I would likely never become aware of or consider on my own
I like slacks hoodies and sneakers, the fit you’ve got on is kinda interesting but definitely not something I would wear. Both because I would get mugged if someone in my neighborhood saw me wearing that but also just because I think it makes me look unfashionable in my social circle. My sense of fashion, like everyone else’s, is determined in large part what I see other people wearing and what I consider to be attractive. I think there are plenty of ways for me to wear clothes, recently I’ve been wearing collared shirts and slacks that show a bit of ankle, but sometimes I want slightly longer pants that cover the shoe especially if I am wearing a heavier top like a hoodie. It’s just that I’ve seen those types of style work, and I’ve come to like the way that I look when I wear my clothes that way.
I feel like trends function as a guide for those who aren’t intrinsically drawn to specific styles, but do want to attain a certain status or feel within society. So to some, it’s more about the type of person they become when they wear it instead of actually being drawn to the essence of the style itself (probably because they aren’t the artsy, designy type). So in a way, it does have a social purpose in day to day life outside of the fashion industry just making all these moneyz.
Bliss as always with another banger! Please do a Peter Do runway episode soon I’m so interested/confused on his references & im sure you could break it down very simply for me
I love what you said about trends and I could not agree more. I prefer to buy really well made items of high quality material that I absolutely love. I have a test. When I first try on the item, I usually don’t buy it. If I go home and I’m still thinking about it for two days after, then I know I need it. This is why I can still wear items that I bought 15 yrs ago because I truly love them. I do fast fashion. I’ve also noticed that much of the material and construction on my older garments is far better than the stuff in stores now. For example, I went to LV the other day and looked at their clothing for the first time in years. I was shocked at the decline in quality. I saw a women’s suit jacket that actually had puckering at the shoulder seam. Unacceptable at that price point. The material on the wool coats was nowhere near the caliber of wool that I remember them having.
As a person who plays games almost every day I’ve never payed attention to a single game critic bc half the time they don’t put the effort in to review the full game. They’ll play the first hour or so and write up a review to publish it a quick as possible. I feel like critics are slowly becoming less important due to the fact that I can find more like minded individuals and see their opinion in a much more interesting and informative manner. This also goes for most genres as well.
Seeing you put so many things in your pockets was amazing, I’ve been wearing things without big pockets for so long that I forgot how practical it is to have them!
For me understanding the difference between liking something because I actually like it, and recognising something that I've seen before on places like ig and Pinterest that get alot of hype because it's a similar feeling when you first see that thing and get excited but for different reasons so I end up deeply questioning every purchase in aim to not clog up my wardrobe because the only things that stick and stay timeless in my styling are things that initially resonate with me and not things that are subtly microtrendy. The same goes for the other way around aswell, just because it's a microtrend doesn't mean you have to hate it if you still don't because there can be a crossover, yk those lace cami things I still love those but ppl do say they aren't cool, but to stay sustainable and with a good quality and versatile wardrobe the only thing I find that works is to ask myself if it truly is something I like, it sounds simple but it can be pretty hard with all of the different media I end up consuming p.s I love your channel its like my version of cocomelon and one of the few things I watch without multitasking you are very amazing at what you do
I disagree partially. I think that fashion critics will influence some markets. It all depends on the public that they’re trying to target. I think that people who consume high and good or high fashion are more inclined to be influenced by what critics say, they’re more inclined to read what critics say to start with.
I hate the tortured artist thing, as someone who used to do art and many other things, and who now 'suffers' more I can tell you it will do nothing for your will to create or make art. Art that comes from pain is created once that pain has subsided enough to express it. That kind of pain has to be a strong emotion. Making your life harder by not fixing your problems will only make you miserable, and misery I would say is the absence of any emotion.
Bro I swear I comment on TH-cam like twice a year 😂 you make me laugh a lot man, with your humour - then I admire your knowledge and how eloquently you share your non-biased thoughts 🔮 I swear dude, maximum respect for your entertainment 🤓😎
On the suffering = art topic i used to see it as tool but now think that approach can often come out too contrived. Doing art for sure helps if you suffer with something but is deffo not a source of readymade creativity and has been done so many times. It’s a bit of a cliche to be a suffering artist. Good art should surprise you as hitherto unexplored territory maybe. Great content bliss - you are the best!
I really appreciate your channel. I have had a sewing and alterations business for 10 years in northern California. I’ve learned a few things. NO ONE knows how to sew. I once had a 40+ woman watch in wonder as I sewed on a button. And so no one appreciates the quality of work or fabric anymore. We appreciate the quality of a well-built house and a car, let’s say, but as long as some thing is “the look“ it doesn’t matter how it’s made or what it’s made of. After all, they may only wear it for a week or two.
I know how to sew and I'm 40+ I also love to restore vintage fashion pieces and I do truly appreciate the craftmanship for example, Vivienne Westwood is my No.1 for Amazing Jackets, no one compares to her 💯
I feel like people think you must have pain to create good art because we always/only see artists in pain as they create good art. But what they fail to realize is that they create good art because they’re hood artists. All you have to be is a good artist
Seeing how thinly stretched creative people are in the goal of consumerism often makes people go a little into pain too, that or they started in pain and just had to create to expel it from them imo
What will make you a better artist is pushing your art til you find what works. This is painful for some. Pushing through that pain is where success lies. Most can’t do it.
I still think 2014-2016 trends kind of survived their era, since they are very versatile and look good worn everyday, they were not as extreme as the trends we have today.
2015 absolutely has a chokehold on my wardrobe; many of the archive pieces I've been hunting for are either from that year or within a couple years of it
@@iwannaseethereceipts same. i remember getting into fashion at that time, following ian connor, kanye and asap heavily. i just found a pair of white green raf stans, bought mostly cause of nostalgia, but i still love the minimal design and quality.
I love a lot of early 2010s fashion maybe not the galaxy stuff but the romantic skirts and sweaters and kneesocks etc. can't wait for the new wave of y2k to be gone it's soooo ugly
Bliss please use the 1930’s congressmen on the radio voice you used at the end of this video for a whole video in the future. It’s kinda soothing and enjoyable. Also have you thought of adding more of a asmr &/ mukbang type theme to future videos? Something that the fans have been asking for for a long time, so I just don’t want it to go unheard ( or unanswered) xoxo
while i do agree some article of clothing are trendy, There are some article of clothing that arent like the gucci horsebit loafers, or the dior saddle bag or the LV speedy bag, the vans the converse. These are things that would stand the test of time
Social media has made it possible for small brands to reach a broader audience. A lot of my favorite pieces are made by driven small and up and coming Insta-brands. Alot of these brands are created and run by driven designers that use the platform to express their creativity and share their style through clothing. This is one huge positive in my opinion.
i think the point made about trends is spot on but i want to add on that i think a large part of why people like "trendy" things is because the desire for the piece in question is validated by others. A lot of very trendy things are more out there and people wouldnt usually be brave enough to buy them, but because "weird" is now normal or even cool, people are way more inclined to get things they usually wouldnt be brave enough to.
The same question about cohesion used to be a problem for me. Demna created a ball gown and a futuristic look in the same collection and gets away with it. From my perspective, I view a collection the same way a musician views an album. You can either have different kinds of songs for different audiences on the same album or just follow the same genre all the way but as a musician or designer that can fit into all types of categories perfectly that would be limiting. I feel at the end of the day it is the aesthetic that brings the cohesion/balance either it's a ball gown or futuristic look, you can still recognize whoever is behind the whole body of work. i mean, it is the same aesthetic that is translated into the architecture design of the store.
I agree, for me cohesion is more about exploring an idea thoroughly and telling a story than selling something. Demna is such a great example of this. Plus using cohesion as a guiding framework can be really useful when trying to define a palette of colours or fabrics.
it's funny that you say that video game reviewers dictate what the market buys, but the medium is actually almost indistinguishable from music and movies to me, in terms of consumption-to-criticism, and i think that's largely a result of having had access to piracy and emulation from a very young age (and continuing to keep up with it), so the $60 per entry paywall never really existed for me if only i could, as an individual, pirate clothing...but i still havent gotten around to investing in a sewing machine, and even that would only take me so far
The thing with suffering is that... You want art to be your job. You want to make money and living out of it. It has to become a craft in certain way. You have to make it sustainable for your living. If makeing art is your living and you have nothing else to live for, still you have to sustain yourself to do it as long as possible, don't you? Suffering is not halping that.
Love your commentary, always insightful and intelligent. I agree about trends. Personally, I can’t stand logos and monograms, refuse to wear them. I like pieces with either great functionality or lyrical artistic fluidity, meaning that it moves and it speaks, like your tunic. Forgive me, (interior designer here, used to be a fashion designer and had my own company) but I want to push the antique sofa away from the stair entry, toward the side wall, next to a tall Victorian floor lamp, with either a painting or antique mirror over it on the stair wall, with a small carved end table beside it, near the stair entry on the opposite side of the floor lamp. Love the room, but that’s needling me, 🤔
Bliss Foster your take on artist and mental illness needs to be announced from the mountain tops. (I’m a music teacher) Ive had way to many students come to me thinking their mental illness makes them a perfect candidate for being a musician. Often I get the sense that their parents have hired me instead of a trained medical professional. If you have depression, ocd, and or anxiety you need a therapist! Art does not heal treatment and self care does.
Are those JW anderson trousers the ones with the two kinds of pleating at the top? I love them so much and the denim ones are such a grail for me (I also love the vest, no hate to the vest ahahahlvbdsukabl.)
@@BlissFoster oh I think I know them, the ones with the wide fabric belt? (also, this is the first time you've replied to me, Im so happy, I know you said you read all the comments but still!)
I strongly believe social media has artificially inflated hype in terms of trends and what’s popular. Trends are fully capable of coming and going online before you even see them on someone in real life
I swear i never see no one with new balance 505 on feet irl
there used to be two seasons for clothes, then four, now SheIn has a new "season" every 6 days
Bliss with his tunic pocket is every woman who experiences men’s sized pants pockets for the first time
Yep, veeeeery jealous of that pocket right now. Thinking that I once bought a wool winter coat with fake pockets. I thought they were just sewn shut ☠️
I got a new jacket. I was so excited to discover the mens jacket-style pockets!
im still out here thinking i could make millions if i just create normal ass looking womens clothing that have normal sized or hidden pockets. why is no company doing that? are they afraid of losing their purse business?
@@Mr.Marbles it’s boring. No unique selling point. It’ll take time to penetrate the market. Good for a mature company with extra capital, for a new affordable line. Not good for a startup
@@amyx231 the unique selling point is that it has normal sized pockets. all the girls that heard the idea loved it. you would have to create some wild ads. i dont know, maybe some adventure where a girl is climbing on a mountain in normal ass clothes and then just pulls out a pickaxe out of her jeans pocket or someting. or a robber steals her purse and opens it an inside is just a photo of a middle finger and you can see how she has all her belongings in her pocket. and then make the clothes in good quality and not too wild, just regular. then when it gets bigger you can create more daring stuff.
but i dont know, im no marketing expert and i wont start anything but i have this feeling this could work somehow.
I don't remember the last time I was this mesmerized by a youtube video, the way you talked about fashion and clothes being art is breathtaking.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and opinions in a fun, interesting and engaging way.
I think a big part of dissipating trends that you didn’t really get into is the fact that the first few times the public sees an item worn it will be placed with a complementary outfit. As that item becomes more popular we see it worn in ways that don’t complement the item as much and it starts to become a gaudy or cringey look in our eyes.
I think that's cause certain people wanna wear it in "never before seen" ways and look unique. Not every person wants to rock it the usual complementary way if that's what everyone else is doing.
Yes, especially when people try to bring things that work in some situations into places they don't seem to be. Like some of the styles that came from festivals don't really work for everyday wear. Especially as a lot of trends seem to work better in certain climates that not everyone has. I remember a few years ago when Timberland work boots were really in, but those didn't work for my friends in Florida where they'd be too warm for most of the year, and the crocheted top trend more recently doesn't work so well where I am in Canada as we only get a few hot days to wear them, unless it's a sweater.
No, some of those stuff are just plain ugly and distasteful by themselves ☠️ Like Rolex wtf
Wow you answered that "what's the purpose of fashion criticism" question so well! very well said.
I think another issue with trends is that they reach some sort of "icon"/iconic status for a certain (short) period of time, immediately rendering them outdated after it passes/it's oversaturated.
I love how down to earth you are and the clarity you provide for fashion. The movie example of how they will only make a few movies vs fashion output being higher in quantity so they're not as thoughtful with it generally -was really good.
The most truthful thing you said in this video is that all Rolex’s are ugly. Thank you for being factual. Love you.
I couldn’t follow a trend even if I wanted too. This shit is moving so rapidly I can’t and have no desire to keep up. I buy what I like and very few and far between. Anything I buy is done with intention, thought and purpose. I separate the omnipresent voice (social media) from my own and follow that one. I disconnected from social media completely around 2016-2017. So the only way to be forced feed was through direct influence or fast fashion stores pushing the trend. I do notice as a result people who follow trends religiously don’t particularly care for my fashion sense. My best friend is constantly critiquing everything I wear. And it’s usually negative but at least it inspires thought and that I love none the less. Great questions, great answers ❤
Agreed. I swear, I blink and then 5-6 different clothing trends go by. I have no idea what's popular and everything cycles so fast that all pieces of clothing ever will be en vogue eventually.
art that is created from a perspective of suffering is great.
but its great because is powerful and expresses something real.
Superficially creating a situation like that is not great because its not real.
art is a tool to express. and expressing suffering is very powerful to subjects and important for the one expressing.
if you are so lucky that you dont live suffering that doesn’t mean you cant make powerful art, it just means you are fortunate enough to not have to epress yourself emotionally in the same degree that someone who lives with suffering might.
this opens a door to make philosophically powerful art.
Holy shit that closing voice change snapped me out of reality for second. Amazing video as always
I also believe that trends earn their value by newness, not by it's actual design, but then we also end up over exposed to these things that they become ugly and now we gotta move on to the next thing
The look of the Rick Owens store absolutely is hard and brutal and intimidating at first. But then I was looking at a gorgeous lizard skin bag that was in a glass case without a top on it and the sales associate said “go ahead and pick it up!” No bulky alarm on the bag or anything. Also every piece of furniture and art in the store is for sale. So you actually feel free to explore the rich variety of textures, materials, and forms that the store has to offer. I didn’t buy anything but left feeling extremely gratified. Check it out if you can!
“That does sound extremely challenging to me, I can’t wait to see it” wow what a beautiful answer
The movie Frank combats the tortured artist myth. At the end of the film, a character asks Franks parents about how his mental illness helped his art. They’re shocked and say that it didn’t, it only ever hindered him, and that his creativity was always there before he developed an illness. I think this is really true. Tragedy often stops people from being the great artists they truly could be. The fact people go and search for it to improve their art is crazy to me.
Trends do suck. But I feel like for a lot of people they can be a useful lifeline in fashion. If someone is confident and sure enough of themselves to know what they like and not care what everyone else thinks about their wild outfit then that's great! That's how it should be, but I sure as hell wasn't when I first got into fashion. Incorporating some trendy elements into said wild outfit can make it feel a little safer to wear at all, and a little "YOOOO" now and then can be the confidence boost that motivates you to continue and evolve your style. Like little hype-y training wheels until some day you don't need them anymore. 🚲
Heck yeah I totally agree! Trends got me interested in fashion, but like you said, they are like training wheels. I don’t feel like I need them anymore, but without them, maybe I wouldn’t have gotten into fashion at all.
TH-camrs will tell you over and over “no that’s terrible never wear clothes for approval” are the same ones copying trends to gain approval from the TH-cam algorithm
Trends got me to try things, and then I kept what I liked. I still wear Crocs I got in middle school (2009 I think), and shoes with separate toes that were a trend in 2015. Although most of what I wear is more timeless styles with maybe something different like shoes, or a trendy print on something. I'm still learning how to style a pair of red leopard print cargo skinny jeans I got on clearance 2 years ago, but I still find they're cool and unique to play with, especially with a solid coloured sweater or something for winter, when no one would see a statement shirt under my coat.
@@yvnginfinity exactly. They're not genuinely loving clothes they show to us. They bought them or got from sponsors because they're attention w...res and care only about social approval. If they actually liked these things, they would wear them season after season.
@Bliss Foster is one of the best things to ever happen to contemporary fashion education on TH-cam
I don't think one can appreciate chaos without certain level of cohesion that goes with it
For the purpose of fashion critics, id say that most people get passionated about something when other people talk about their passion. A really passionated car guy will make you interested in cars, your channel made me passionated with fashion, fantào chan’el made me passionated about music.
Passion are the best thing ever, it treaches you to be happy with things you already had, before you where just seeing people in clothes everyday, now you walk on the streets and get hyped because someone wore a designer you love, before you were just on the highway bored, now you get happy with every car you see. Passion is appreciated the world around us by giving it lore, meaning, exclusivity.
You are teaching other how to appreciate things better
you are making people happier, maybe making them new friends, opening them to new visions
Your are changing way more lives than someone recommending you what to buy
I think the "tortured artist" trope is romanticized far too much; I think that's gone a bit more by the wayside over the years as we shift as a society toward valuing mental health care. That said, latching onto the pain as a source of inspiration is kinda... ass-backwards, frankly. A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful, or at least compelling in some way; they don't seek out suffering in order to depict it. Art is a vehicle in which to flee suffering through self-expression, it isn't (or shouldn't be) a way to amplify suffering.
Think of Alexander McQueen. Lots of his early work is inspired by the trauma he experienced as a child. The press and buyers loved the results they see on the runways, so he pulls himself further down that route for more praise. It doesn't help that he's very protective over his work.
Art can express in any type of feelings.. but self- suffering themselves for a desire to imitate. Leads to hurting themselves and their soul.
Yes!! The reality is that the majority of high quality art in the world was produced by people who were in a good spot in their lives at the time. The tragic stories get the most coverage, but just as with every other task we seek to do, when we are well rested, less stressed, etc, we tend to do a much better job than when we are in the throes of a depressive episode. As a creative person with mental health issues myself, I hate the notion that I should lean into my unhealthiness in order to thrive creatively. What a horribly dangerous idea. My former partner was in a similar boat to me, and was pushed by our peers toward this kind of thing a lot, which led him toward extremely dangerous and self destructive behaviors and eventually necessitated in the ending of our relationship. It’s such a horrible thing to encourage people to neglect their mental health. We’d never blatantly do that in any other context but for some reason in the creative world, we let it slide
Art doesn’t need to have anything to do with mental illness. You’re kinda perpetuating the big art lie when you say “A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful “
Wanna really know what great artists do with their pain? They do what regular people do with their pain ,harm themselves and the people around them!
"A great artist turns their pain into something beautiful, or at least compelling in some way; they don't seek out suffering in order to depict it."
Excellently said. This is what a lot of ppl don't get. There's a big difference between using art to express your pain and inflicting pain on to do art.
Trendy fashion items are like that annoying song that you hear everywhere you go. You don't like it at first but it gets played so much that after a few days you start thinking you like it. Same with fashion, brands push a range ot items heavily and since you see them a few times a day, you kind of trick yourself into liking it
Or conversely there are songs you love but once you hear it a million times you never want to hear it again. Even if it's an an amazing song. For example, Nirvana's Smells like Teen Spirit. Its a great song but I could go the rest of my life without hearing it again.
I like how these videos feel like that conversation you have with that random person you met that you just clicked with instantly. now you're just having the most beautiful conversation about your thoughts upon things, but in this specific setting. it feels like im in class, but its like my favorite class though. if that makes sense.....
This vid was randomly recommended but I appreciate it so damn much.
Bliss you should share as much as you’d like about your personal fashion bias’. It also gives us viewers more of an idea of where your critiques come from with your fashion reviews… also great point about about inflicting pain and suffering in art. Remember, Leonardo da Vinci was a very healthy strong social man .. artists don’t all have to fall victims to unhealthy unproductive toxicity from an idea of a “fallen angel” complex
I just wanted to say I was watching another fashion TH-camr and they were questioning the pronunciation of a certain designer and one the dudes was like “idk that’s how bliss foster says it so I’m going w that” and I think that’s really inspiring
name drop! who was it?
@@understitchYT could be fashionlover4
Quick story related to Cohesion… last night I’m in my favorite Italian Restaurant, talking to the owners who I know fairly well. Their menu is limited and well curated, their interior is beautiful, and everything about them feels cohesive. I was surprised to learn that at home Sam, the owner and chef, has a passion for Asian inspired dishes, and variety. He wishes there was a way to share his culinary flexibility with his customers, but to offer this experience to his customers he’d have to remove himself from his duties and replace himself in the kitchen to be able to expand.
It may just be human nature that we have an aversion to unlike collections of things and experiences, which gives way to creative editing and good ideas ending up on the cutting room floor, but as the saying goes “sometimes it’s better to ride the horse in the direction it’s going” and pick your design and marketing battles if it means giving your brand a chance to survive.
BLISS I WILL NEVER LOSE INTEREST IN THE RED OCTOBERS!!!😂.
Facts my grails
Exactly, any color way is grailed.
The picture popped up and I literally was like “man I still want those :(“
Fr red octobers and turtle doves r some of my favorite Yeezy models with the foam runners
YEEZYS ALL ON YO SOFA
Bliss you are such a treasure. All of these answers are so on point and insightful. The stuff about the tortured artist was very powerfully articulated. Bless Bliss.
Im not even into fasion beyond styling (picking my own outfits in things my style or helping style a friend) but i wish i was so i could watch your content, youve got a dope camera personality!
Thanks so much for the kind words! I try to make this stuff accessible for everyone, even if they don’t keep up with the industry. If you’re interested in a good “next step” check out my video called “Balenciaga, Demna Gvasalia, and a World of Clones” 💫💫
Just started fashion designs and this is definitely one of my new favorite channels. Great context, insights and opinions.
Ending voice sealed it for me. Thanks
I think the point of a fashion critic is to demystify the complexities of the brand and of the vision for the consumer. The people that want to understand the fashion, but dont have the time to research each and every brand and every one of their collections to understand something they love on a deeper level. It genuinely takes a seriously long time to get to know a brand with fashion when there are just so many options and people to get to know, time that they simply dont have. Also, noone wants to buy something thats super expensive and only then find out that they did something you seriously disagree with, or they have a stance that you personally dont stand for
Also, which dover street is your favourite?
You nailed it 🦾 fully agree.
➖
My favorite DSM will always be NYC bc that was my first one. But I’ve only seen that one+London. Can’t wait to see the new set up in Paris when it’s finally open 💫💫
you remind me of my 6th grade english teacher. you two have exactly the same hair style and color....and the wire rimmed glasses are EXACTLY the same pair she had.. i loved her, she was awesome.
I really like your channel Bliss. Thanks for your honest thoughts on the tortured artist. My best writing came when I actively changed behaviors to heal certain parts of myself. I want to go on a field trip to all the stores you mentioned. I was amazed by the images alone!
OMFG I JUST FOUND YOU!! THANK YOU!!! uhhhh I have been looking for someone presenting these arguments and information. Gratitude 💐
As someone who has suffered a lot with mental illness over the course of my life, It has pushed me to make art and to express. But the quality of my art does not come from that. I make art to help escape those feelings and to be understood, not because its something to aspire to. If I could flick a switch tomorrow, Id have all of those feelings stripped from me and Id never look back.
Trends should not be followed as rules of the fashion game. I have discussed this with my fashion design student friends a lot. It is sad that some of them define their future brands as a bunch of trends mashed together. I think being fashionable is just dressing others and yourself with taste, balanced proportions, and identity. Just as you said, understanding one's personal style is more important than dancing by someone else's flute and wearing whatever other influencers are wearing. A lot of it comes from social media and needing to be liked. There are not a lot of brave people who have a core identity, and a sense of style who are discussing such things, so thanks :)
My mom always told us is "style and fashion are two completely different things" trends come and go, some things will look good forever. (Also my sister and I said we were glad we were poor when we were younger bc it's very few photos of us in clothes that just dive bombed out of the fashion conversation)
Well, I started to rewatch all Ann Demeulemeester collections starting from the first ones. And her first collections look more stylish, beautiful and modern than most of the clothes I see in shops this summer. That's incomprehensible for me. She was so ahead of her time creating same time timeless pieces.
The thumbnail for this made me just go OH GOD NO, instantly clicked. You really nailed picking the most cursed dead trends for that image.
I hate everything I’ve seen this season with so much passion that I want to cry. Fashion is moving backwards and not in a good way
“Oh hi, didn’t see you there. My name is DIGITAL BEGGAR” 😂😂😂 GOT ME GOOOOD
great message bliss, a lot more than a fashion critique. much appreciated words
I do not think that I have commented on a Bliss Foster video. But I have been so lucky to catch a cold 🤕🤒🥶🥵😵💫 I think that it’s the perfect time, to hop on to patreon. I need some lengthy deepdiving. Thank you for your humor and thank you for taking fashion seriously, even when it’s not. Greetings from Denmark 🇩🇰
🙏🙏 means a lot to me, thank you 💫💫
I turn to fashion critics when I feel a strong reaction to a collection that I don’t understand. Sometimes it’s nice to dive into the details until you find exactly what you were connecting to in that moment.
So revealing to learn that uber-trendy Rick Owens is also so "practical."
I mean, pockets-that's just crazy...and so useful!
What a maverick!
And why is your work incredible? Because as you mentioned, despite the fact that I can see at a new look pretty much as soon as it hits the runway, your perspective broadens my understanding and instills in me greater appreciation for the creative process including the various inspirations… stuff I would likely never become aware of or consider on my own
Thank you for emphasizing on the overly romanticized tragic but beautiful artist. I’m really not trynna see other designers end like Alexander McQueen
I feel like Lagerfeld could design circles around McQueen (and to be fair anybody) and he seemed a happy boy
I like slacks hoodies and sneakers, the fit you’ve got on is kinda interesting but definitely not something I would wear. Both because I would get mugged if someone in my neighborhood saw me wearing that but also just because I think it makes me look unfashionable in my social circle. My sense of fashion, like everyone else’s, is determined in large part what I see other people wearing and what I consider to be attractive. I think there are plenty of ways for me to wear clothes, recently I’ve been wearing collared shirts and slacks that show a bit of ankle, but sometimes I want slightly longer pants that cover the shoe especially if I am wearing a heavier top like a hoodie. It’s just that I’ve seen those types of style work, and I’ve come to like the way that I look when I wear my clothes that way.
I feel like trends function as a guide for those who aren’t intrinsically drawn to specific styles, but do want to attain a certain status or feel within society. So to some, it’s more about the type of person they become when they wear it instead of actually being drawn to the essence of the style itself (probably because they aren’t the artsy, designy type). So in a way, it does have a social purpose in day to day life outside of the fashion industry just making all these moneyz.
Bliss as always with another banger! Please do a Peter Do runway episode soon I’m so interested/confused on his references & im sure you could break it down very simply for me
you / your content keeps getting better and better, bless u bliss
I love what you said about trends and I could not agree more. I prefer to buy really well made items of high quality material that I absolutely love. I have a test. When I first try on the item, I usually don’t buy it. If I go home and I’m still thinking about it for two days after, then I know I need it. This is why I can still wear items that I bought 15 yrs ago because I truly love them. I do fast fashion. I’ve also noticed that much of the material and construction on my older garments is far better than the stuff in stores now. For example, I went to LV the other day and looked at their clothing for the first time in years. I was shocked at the decline in quality. I saw a women’s suit jacket that actually had puckering at the shoulder seam. Unacceptable at that price point. The material on the wool coats was nowhere near the caliber of wool that I remember them having.
As a person who plays games almost every day I’ve never payed attention to a single game critic bc half the time they don’t put the effort in to review the full game. They’ll play the first hour or so and write up a review to publish it a quick as possible. I feel like critics are slowly becoming less important due to the fact that I can find more like minded individuals and see their opinion in a much more interesting and informative manner. This also goes for most genres as well.
10:50 the interior design of the store is like a kind of futuristic minimalist :)
🙏 I didn’t watch yet, the fact that this topic of discussion specifically within 2 years and the ebb and flow of recent trends is great.
Seeing you put so many things in your pockets was amazing, I’ve been wearing things without big pockets for so long that I forgot how practical it is to have them!
Big pockets are awesome
Glad to see your up! Youve been working for so long and finally gdtting your recognition, props
For me understanding the difference between liking something because I actually like it, and recognising something that I've seen before on places like ig and Pinterest that get alot of hype because it's a similar feeling when you first see that thing and get excited but for different reasons so I end up deeply questioning every purchase in aim to not clog up my wardrobe because the only things that stick and stay timeless in my styling are things that initially resonate with me and not things that are subtly microtrendy. The same goes for the other way around aswell, just because it's a microtrend doesn't mean you have to hate it if you still don't because there can be a crossover, yk those lace cami things I still love those but ppl do say they aren't cool, but to stay sustainable and with a good quality and versatile wardrobe the only thing I find that works is to ask myself if it truly is something I like, it sounds simple but it can be pretty hard with all of the different media I end up consuming p.s I love your channel its like my version of cocomelon and one of the few things I watch without multitasking you are very amazing at what you do
Thanks for the super important reminded! I needed to hear that
I disagree partially. I think that fashion critics will influence some markets. It all depends on the public that they’re trying to target. I think that people who consume high and good or high fashion are more inclined to be influenced by what critics say, they’re more inclined to read what critics say to start with.
I hate the tortured artist thing, as someone who used to do art and many other things, and who now 'suffers' more I can tell you it will do nothing for your will to create or make art. Art that comes from pain is created once that pain has subsided enough to express it. That kind of pain has to be a strong emotion. Making your life harder by not fixing your problems will only make you miserable, and misery I would say is the absence of any emotion.
I didn't expect to see a Yahtzee reference in a Bliss Foster video, but that's what we're here for. Intertextuality.
bliss be hittin his workout lately
Bro I swear I comment on TH-cam like twice a year 😂 you make me laugh a lot man, with your humour - then I admire your knowledge and how eloquently you share your non-biased thoughts 🔮 I swear dude, maximum respect for your entertainment 🤓😎
On the suffering = art topic i used to see it as tool but now think that approach can often come out too contrived. Doing art for sure helps if you suffer with something but is deffo not a source of readymade creativity and has been done so many times. It’s a bit of a cliche to be a suffering artist. Good art should surprise you as hitherto unexplored territory maybe. Great content bliss - you are the best!
Thank you for answering these questions I learned so much 🤩
I really appreciate your channel. I have had a sewing and alterations business for 10 years in northern California.
I’ve learned a few things. NO ONE knows how to sew. I once had a 40+ woman watch in wonder as I sewed on a button. And so no one appreciates the quality of work or fabric anymore. We appreciate the quality of a well-built house and a car, let’s say, but as long as some thing is “the look“ it doesn’t matter how it’s made or what it’s made of. After all, they may only wear it for a week or two.
I know how to sew and I'm 40+ I also love to restore vintage fashion pieces and I do truly appreciate the craftmanship for example, Vivienne Westwood is my No.1 for Amazing Jackets, no one compares to her 💯
I feel like people think you must have pain to create good art because we always/only see artists in pain as they create good art. But what they fail to realize is that they create good art because they’re hood artists. All you have to be is a good artist
Seeing how thinly stretched creative people are in the goal of consumerism often makes people go a little into pain too, that or they started in pain and just had to create to expel it from them imo
What will make you a better artist is pushing your art til you find what works. This is painful for some. Pushing through that pain is where success lies. Most can’t do it.
I still think 2014-2016 trends kind of survived their era, since they are very versatile and look good worn everyday, they were not as extreme as the trends we have today.
2015 absolutely has a chokehold on my wardrobe; many of the archive pieces I've been hunting for are either from that year or within a couple years of it
@@iwannaseethereceipts same. i remember getting into fashion at that time, following ian connor, kanye and asap heavily. i just found a pair of white green raf stans, bought mostly cause of nostalgia, but i still love the minimal design and quality.
If your style is defined by streetwear then it makes sense that it’s relying on styles from around 2015
I love a lot of early 2010s fashion maybe not the galaxy stuff but the romantic skirts and sweaters and kneesocks etc. can't wait for the new wave of y2k to be gone it's soooo ugly
Also thank you for saying you shouldn’t just follow trends! Wear what you genuinely like
You can say any trend was bad but those off white and beige balenciaga triple s sneakers are still to this day one of my fav sneakers
Bliss please use the 1930’s congressmen on the radio voice you used at the end of this video for a whole video in the future. It’s kinda soothing and enjoyable. Also have you thought of adding more of a asmr &/ mukbang type theme to future videos? Something that the fans have been asking for for a long time, so I just don’t want it to go unheard ( or unanswered)
xoxo
while i do agree some article of clothing are trendy, There are some article of clothing that arent like the gucci horsebit loafers, or the dior saddle bag or the LV speedy bag, the vans the converse. These are things that would stand the test of time
Ya got me quick!! Excellent commentary!!
Thanks!
thank YOU! :)
Social media has made it possible for small brands to reach a broader audience. A lot of my favorite pieces are made by driven small and up and coming Insta-brands. Alot of these brands are created and run by driven designers that use the platform to express their creativity and share their style through clothing. This is one huge positive in my opinion.
Trends partially fades out cause it is not unique anymore if it was before or it was trash in the first place
When I visited Antidote in Atlanta, an employee told me that their current store is designed by the same interior designers as some Rick Owens stores.
Great stuff, Mr. Foster. You've made some very interesting points.
i think the point made about trends is spot on but i want to add on that i think a large part of why people like "trendy" things is because the desire for the piece in question is validated by others. A lot of very trendy things are more out there and people wouldnt usually be brave enough to buy them, but because "weird" is now normal or even cool, people are way more inclined to get things they usually wouldnt be brave enough to.
you make fashion make sense & I love you for it.
Just found this channel and I'm having a great time 😁 Thank you for sharing
The same question about cohesion used to be a problem for me. Demna created a ball gown and a futuristic look in the same collection and gets away with it. From my perspective, I view a collection the same way a musician views an album. You can either have different kinds of songs for different audiences on the same album or just follow the same genre all the way but as a musician or designer that can fit into all types of categories perfectly that would be limiting. I feel at the end of the day it is the aesthetic that brings the cohesion/balance either it's a ball gown or futuristic look, you can still recognize whoever is behind the whole body of work. i mean, it is the same aesthetic that is translated into the architecture design of the store.
I agree, for me cohesion is more about exploring an idea thoroughly and telling a story than selling something. Demna is such a great example of this. Plus using cohesion as a guiding framework can be really useful when trying to define a palette of colours or fabrics.
Pain and suffering is required to create art, but only because pain and suffering is required in being human. It's simply a part of life.
it's funny that you say that video game reviewers dictate what the market buys, but the medium is actually almost indistinguishable from music and movies to me, in terms of consumption-to-criticism, and i think that's largely a result of having had access to piracy and emulation from a very young age (and continuing to keep up with it), so the $60 per entry paywall never really existed for me
if only i could, as an individual, pirate clothing...but i still havent gotten around to investing in a sewing machine, and even that would only take me so far
The thing with suffering is that... You want art to be your job. You want to make money and living out of it. It has to become a craft in certain way. You have to make it sustainable for your living. If makeing art is your living and you have nothing else to live for, still you have to sustain yourself to do it as long as possible, don't you? Suffering is not halping that.
Love your commentary, always insightful and intelligent. I agree about trends. Personally, I can’t stand logos and monograms, refuse to wear them. I like pieces with either great functionality or lyrical artistic fluidity, meaning that it moves and it speaks, like your tunic.
Forgive me, (interior designer here, used to be a fashion designer and had my own company) but I want to push the antique sofa away from the stair entry, toward the side wall, next to a tall Victorian floor lamp, with either a painting or antique mirror over it on the stair wall, with a small carved end table beside it, near the stair entry on the opposite side of the floor lamp. Love the room, but that’s needling me, 🤔
You did the deep voice at the end way too well.. 😂😂
I agree! You should be buying pieces that you’re passionate about and that will make sure they are timeless for tou
That outro voice was something else. If you arent vocally trained, I'm sure you could be an amazing voice actor with some practice.
the answer is simple. fashion is fleeting and style is forever.
Bliss Foster your take on artist and mental illness needs to be announced from the mountain tops. (I’m a music teacher) Ive had way to many students come to me thinking their mental illness makes them a perfect candidate for being a musician. Often I get the sense that their parents have hired me instead of a trained medical professional. If you have depression, ocd, and or anxiety you need a therapist! Art does not heal treatment and self care does.
I think the Nike air Yeezy 2, were fire, is fire and will continue to flame on
trends usually spend 2 years growing then 2 years dying
All the information on this video was priceless, but the outro LMAO
Are those JW anderson trousers the ones with the two kinds of pleating at the top? I love them so much and the denim ones are such a grail for me (I also love the vest, no hate to the vest ahahahlvbdsukabl.)
Nope! No pleats on these. They look like standard cargo pants with an apron on the front
@@BlissFoster oh I think I know them, the ones with the wide fabric belt? (also, this is the first time you've replied to me, Im so happy, I know you said you read all the comments but still!)
Yeah! Those are the ones! I always see your comments, thanks so much for participating so much 🦾
you are the greatest doing this,taught me a lot thanks and keep up the amazing work
Name brands have always been hideous and I'm tired of people obsessively hyping them up for the past 15 years.
Please do an entire video with that ending voice 😂