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STYLE AND CULTURE

SKATE-STYLE LEGACY

For decades now, skateboarders have had an unmistakable style, born out of comfort and durability – because, let’s face it, there’s no escaping the odd rough fall or missed landing. In recent years, however, the skater-style stakes have risen and the boardwear blueprint has been tweaked, refreshed and reworked by high fashion’s head honchos. Join us in taking a look at how skater style went from curbside to catwalk and returned afresh.

the skate style legacy

Picture: Rex

Baggy and oversized in the 90s

While skateboarding has its roots in the 50s, it was the sidewalk surfers of the 90s that took the sport – and associated subculture – to the masses. Pro skaters, like NYC scenester Harold Hunter, were embraced by the fashionable set (see Larry Clark’s infamous 1995 exploitation flick Kids), and the by-now staple styles of ultra-baggy T-shirts and trousers, wallet chains and bulky suede kicks filtered their way (via VHS skate tapes and magazines like Thrasher) to communities around the world. While the gigantic, floor-scraping jeans and voluminous workpants might seem questionable cuts now, the combination of 90s skate styles and hip-hop’s obsession with all things XXL saw oversized threads make their first bid for menswear-world domination – a trend that has returned in recent years, albeit in a more refined, flattering silhouette.

Skate Style Legacy | ASOS Style Feed

Picture: IMAXtree

Enduring skate staples

Even if you’ve never picked up a deck in your life, there’s a fair chance your wardrobe is currently littered with skate-inspired pieces. Vans, for example, are arguably the most prominent player, decorating the feet of street stylers everywhere. Jeans ripped from countless falls, oversized vintage shirts, baggy hoodies – it all sounds very familiar, doesn’t it? You might not have realised it, but contemporary streetwear style is steeped in skate tradition. But remember: just because you’ve assumed the skater look, it doesn’t mean you can automatically do a kickflip.

Skate Style Legacy | ASOS Style Feed

Picture: Rex

Hyped brands

Head down to London’s South Bank or Lafayette Street in New York and you can bet there’ll be hordes of kids, skateboards in hand, caps acting as stylish substitutes for helmets, and T-shirts emblazoned with the logo of the latest, greatest label. While we’ve seen brands like Stüssy adorn the tees of skaters since the brand’s inception in the late 80s, the rise of Supreme, Palace and other hyped labels highlights the scene's inroads into the menswear mainstream. The hysteria surrounding every release, the day-long queues and the quadrupling of the resale value have all helped push the unassuming skater aesthetic to the cutting edge of fashion influence.

Skate Style Legacy | ASOS Style Feed

Picture: Rex

High-fashion influence

Take a look at the last few seasons of designer showcases and it’s evident how a casual, street-ready influence has seeped into the world of high fashion. From Gosha Rubchinskiy’s Paccbet line that is rife with steezy graphic-print tees and slouched sweatshirts to Demna Gvasalia’s oversized silhouettes for Vetements – skate style has become ubiquitous. Most recently, Dior Homme sent models down its AW18 runway in wide-leg ramp-ready jeans, while Liam Hodges offered up a slick hip-hop-infused skater aesthetic for his latest collection.

Skate Style Legacy | ASOS Style Feed

Picture: Rex

Blending subcultures

With skate style’s influence on haute couture feeding back into the mainstream, we’ve seen a mishmash of new pieces from various subcultures introduced, breathing new life into the traditional skate template. While staples like hoodies, wide-leg trews and Vans Old Skool kicks remain at the heart of skate style, they are now joined by a host of pieces inspired by terrace casualsgrime style and bold typography – creating a fresh iteration of the style’s original individualistic 'do what you want, wear what you want' aesthetic. No one exemplifies this shift more so than this street styler as he seamlessly mixes a road-ready cross-body bag with a Supreme x Champion gilet, light-washed straight-fit jeans and a casual pair of Converse One Stars.

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