Another 90s flashback for you. The hip combat boot for the alternative teen. Do you wear them now? I remember my first pair of Docs. I learned to hacky-sac in them. Wow, the blisters were bad, but then I wore them religiously for years along with my flannel shirts. At some point I started alternating them with Birkenstocks. I was one of those grunge, alternative, somewhat punkish hippies. Well as a teen styles change with the wind. Right? I have always been a person that didn't do well with styles though. I was never able to have all the right paraphernalia, the exactly right outfit, the perfect image. I was always just sort of me and I guess I still am. That, I think is the best style to be.
Did you wear Doc Martins?
What was your teen style?
I love Doc Martins. Personally, I never wore them, but my fiance still owns a pair that he wears from time to time. :)
ReplyDeleteI wore them after, I lived in Berkeley for a while and it seemed to work. I was a swimmer in high school so I rarely wore makeup after our morning swim but had plenty of freckles. One thing I would do it wear two different earrings, usually out of found objects like shells. Don't know why exactly, but it seemed to work for me.
ReplyDeleteI've never worn Doc Martins. I have read several of the books you mentioned in yesterday's post. You should read some of the other books written by Sarah Addison Allen. I've loved them all.
ReplyDeleteThat's weird. My email tells me I have two comments on this post, but they are not showing up here. Hmmm. Well to Fran @Broken Cookies... I have read all of Sarah Addison Allen's books and yes they are all good. Simple and sweet. My work is not so sweet I am afraid.
ReplyDeletei was a teenager in the late 60 and early 70's---we wore lots of jeans and hippie shirts--but i mostly dressed in whatever i thought looked cute---some people described me as preppy--but i wasn't!
ReplyDeleteI didn't have Doc Martens, but I did have the Payless version of combat boots, LOL. I wore my dad's old military field jacket (by necessity, not to be cool--that was what I had), and I lived in jeans. And, yes, being a teen in Colorado, I definitely had flannels. Hoodies weren't really a big thing then, at least not where I was.
ReplyDeleteShannon at The Warrior Muse, co-host of the 2012 #atozchallenge! Twitter: @AprilA2Z
I didn't wear Doc Martins. For some reason, I thought if I wore anything with a label, I'd break out in hives. Did I already mention I thought I was too cool for school?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, other than my flannels, I wore random things I found at the used clothing store.
So you were a grunge, alternative, punkish hippy, too huh? And you liked Twin Peaks. Something tells me we would've been best buds if we'd gone to the same school.
Never wore Doc Martins. And my teen style was kinda embarassing: I wasn't very confident with my body then, so dressed like a boy, in baggy T-shirts and jeans. In my later teens I experimented with tighter tops in rather bright colours in a lame effort to grab attention. Plus my mom still insisted on picking clothes for me, and I think she kinda forgot I was 16 and not 6 when she buys me stuff...
ReplyDeleteWasn't till my 20s before I settled on a 'style' I was comfortable with. :)
Wow - thanks for sharing your personal styles folks. It is great to connect with people from all over who are varied and interesting and similar too. Styles are just admornments, but I think when we share interest in stories it is a deeper connection of ideas and dreams.
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