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  2. Cholo (subculture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cholo_(subculture)

    Gilberto Rosas describes the fashion of cholos as a style which has become criminalized–"a radically conditioned choice to be visibly and self-consciously identified with a criminalized class" [1] Because the way cholo style has been criminalized, it commonly excludes cholos from employment opportunities while opening them up to routine ...

  3. Bōsōzoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bōsōzoku

    Bōsōzoku style traditionally involves boilersuits similar to those of manual laborers or leather military jackets with baggy pants, and tall boots. This uniform became known as the tokkō-fuku (特攻服, "special attack clothing") and is often adorned with kanji slogans.

  4. Lo Lifes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lo_Lifes

    Lo Lifes was a Brooklyn-based movement and street gang founded by rapper Rack-Lo (George Billips), devoted to the shoplifting and wearing of Polo Ralph Lauren apparel and other fashion brands. The movement was most prominent in the late 1980s and early 1990s. [1] The group's motto is the "2LLs," which are "love and loyalty". [2]

  5. Mexican-American women's fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican-American_women's...

    The Chola style was a combination of styles and it was heavily influenced by the hip-hop culture, the Pachuca style and the gang culture. Cholas were characterized by their oversized clothing and flannel shirts as well as by the use of dark lip liners, dramatic eyeliner and thin eyebrows, and to top it off, an excessive use of hair spray.

  6. Ganguro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganguro

    Ganguro (ガングロ) is an alternative fashion trend among young Japanese women which peaked in popularity around the year 2000 and evolved from gyaru.. The Shibuya and Ikebukuro districts of Tokyo were the centres of ganguro fashion; it was started by rebellious youth who contradicted the traditional Japanese concept of beauty; pale skin, dark hair and neutral makeup tones.

  7. Sharpies (Australian subculture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpies_(Australian...

    Common clothing items included Lee or Levi jeans, cardigans, jumpers, and T-shirts—often individually designed by group members. [ 1 ] Mods were an enemy of sharpies, and their gang brawls were reported in the newspapers during 1966. [ 3 ]

  8. Skinhead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skinhead

    In the late 1950s the post-war economic boom led to an increase in disposable income among many young people. Some of those youths spent that income on new fashions; they wore ripped clothes and would use pieces of material to patch them up as popularised by American soul groups, British R&B bands, certain film actors, and Carnaby Street clothing merchants. [6]

  9. Scuttlers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuttlers

    Scuttlers distinguished themselves from other young men in working-class neighbourhoods by their distinctive clothing. They generally wore a uniform of brass-tipped pointed clogs, bell-bottomed trousers, cut like a sailor's ("bells" that measured fourteen inches round the knee and twenty-one inches round the foot) and "flashy" silk scarves.

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