Anonymous wrote:DS wears athletic shorts and plain tees year round, UA or Nike preferred, or t-shirts from his sports teams or vacations. He’s very into sneakers (Nike, his favs are his Jordan’s) but mostly wears crocs with tall Nike socks and so do his friends. Plain hoodies.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is sad that kids feel that they need to dress alike to be considered trendy or popular. I wonder what happened to individualism. In my school in the early 90's the kids that dressed a little differently were often thought of as cool and rebellious. Now it seems like it is social suicide if you dare to wear anything other than plain sports brand clothing.
Anonymous wrote:The kids my son hangs out with mostly wear plain items, no graphics. Brand doesn’t matter and logos seem frowned upon. My kid wears solid, dark-colored t-shirts and jeans. Jeans are loose, either plain or ripped. Plain hoodie or unbuttoned plaid flannel or Oxford shirt. Converse or Vans. Most of his male friends have a version of this; only one seems like he work hard to distinguish himself with some quirky styles. The girls have more distinctive, trendy styles.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is sad that kids feel that they need to dress alike to be considered trendy or popular. I wonder what happened to individualism. In my school in the early 90's the kids that dressed a little differently were often thought of as cool and rebellious. Now it seems like it is social suicide if you dare to wear anything other than plain sports brand clothing.