Anonymous wrote:My 5th grader is a VSCO wanna be, to my amusement. She picked it up from a friend who has HS siblings. She doesn't own any Crocs or Nike shorts, so she has to make do with multiple scrunchies and an oversize T from camp.![]()
No Hydroflask, either. Over my dead body.
oh no. You’re kid must be cooler than all the other kids!
Anonymous wrote:My DD, 6th grade must be VSCO. She wears the oversized tshirts, the crocs, tons of scrunches and shel necklaces with black string. She recently asked for a hydro flask and I said no because we have TONS of water bottles already. I think I’ll take it over some of her classmates wearing very cropped tops and denim shorts (outside of school).
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been wearing birks and big T-shirt’s since the 80s. Never used VSCO though.
Anonymous wrote:I actually like seeing them. I grew up in a smaller city in the 90s and short-sgortw with big tee shirts (bonus points for Dave Matthews band tour shirts) were basically our uniform with adidas slides. Makes me nostalgic to see girls wearing it again
Anonymous wrote:I hate the term basic
Anonymous wrote:I was at the mall yesterday with my 12 yo who could be considered VSCO I guess and my 9YO who really shouldn't be. A boy/girl set of siblings walked by my girls and laughed and told their mom look at the silly VSCO girls. The mom actually told them to stop and was embarrassed.
My daughter (older) just wanted some trendy stuff for MS, wasn't really trying to be VSCO on purpose but yes she had on birks and a big t-shirt.
Anonymous wrote:Exactly! It’s not harmless teasing. These girls are people and have feelings. I don’t understand adults saying it’s harmless. If someone pointed, laughed and labeled my AA daughter, I’d lose it. It’s not OK under any circumstances.