j-subculture/fashion in japan has sadly fallen to tredification/trying to sell the "image" of types of people rather than actually joining subcultures and influencers trying on various jfashions as a costume, so sadly a lot of jfashions as they were once known have died. it might not look that way to western beginners or those who dont speak japanese, but a lot of subcultures have died, so a lot of brands, magazines, channels, and forums are dying as well. theres still some going strong, which gives me a lot of hope! but kawaii pateen's probably never going to be as active as it once was, since a lot of makeup trends in japan are just trends/styles that were new 10 years ago under newer trendier names. for example, "jirai make" used to be known as "yami make" and before that "byoujaku" and "namekuji", and a lot of the fashion styles being referred to with trendy names like jirai/sabukaru have had long lists of other names they were called before their current labels. i feel like once tiktok finally dies and the social media influencer bubble bursts, jfashion and subculture will return to being true subcultures and not just trends and costumes.
@@whalesharksExcuse me, but define "real subculture" to me. Because what it sounds like you're doing is gatekeeping. So according to your logic, gyaru shouldn't be a "real subculture" because it's trendy, some people think kogal is a costume, and there's a certain stereotype that comes with the people who wear the fashion (loud, obnoxious party people). Jirai Kei is not only trendy clothes and makeup, but it's also related to the menhera and wota subcultures. If it's the name Jirai that bothers you, then you can call Fairy Kei "Spank Kei" from now on because apparently it's the same fashion as Fairy Kei evolved from Spank Kei. You need to understand that fashion and names evolve over time and change whether you like it or not. J-fashion subcultures would be irrelevant if it weren't for people on the internet spreading the word about them.
@@makotomodachiI’m not entirely disagreeing but even the director of fruits magazine said the reason the magazine closed was because no one dressed cool in harajuku anymore. That said I do think the person you’re responding to seems to think these are “subcultures.” They’re not. It’s more like “vibes.” Only a few have a lifestyle attached to it but honestly it’s mainly westerners who get attached to that. Trends come and go. Gyaru was huge in the 90s then again in the late 00s-early 10s then died off. Girly kei took over as the new trend but it’s attached to the mainstream currently, but I predict it may go away as well. Just how fashion works.
@@whalesharksif you think TikTok is ever going to die or the power of influencers is going away, I think you need to come back to reality. Both are here to stay whether you like it or not. Secondly fashion has always been like this. Most kei styles become famous because people do them and then others copy bc they like it. That’s how fashion grows. “Dolly kei” as it was called in the west became popular because people did it in harajuku for a bit and then it died when no one was doing it anymore. That’s just the cycle of fashion.
なんか赤入れればいいでしょ感すごい
Yesss! New Kawaii Pateen video 💗
Wow It's been so long to didn't see the new videos
Upload more please 💜🥺
love you guys!!!
CUTE
Nice!! υπέροχα !!
昔の方が見やすかった…
いい感じの病み具合に仕上がったね👀
キツくなりすぎないようにラメを入れたりして独自の手法を使ってて面白かった
地雷の髪型はやっぱツインテだねζ(´❛-❛`)ζ
아니 대충한거 아냐?
地雷と言ったらピンクモンスターだよね笑
Has this channel died? 😢
Yup :(
j-subculture/fashion in japan has sadly fallen to tredification/trying to sell the "image" of types of people rather than actually joining subcultures and influencers trying on various jfashions as a costume, so sadly a lot of jfashions as they were once known have died. it might not look that way to western beginners or those who dont speak japanese, but a lot of subcultures have died, so a lot of brands, magazines, channels, and forums are dying as well. theres still some going strong, which gives me a lot of hope! but kawaii pateen's probably never going to be as active as it once was, since a lot of makeup trends in japan are just trends/styles that were new 10 years ago under newer trendier names. for example, "jirai make" used to be known as "yami make" and before that "byoujaku" and "namekuji", and a lot of the fashion styles being referred to with trendy names like jirai/sabukaru have had long lists of other names they were called before their current labels. i feel like once tiktok finally dies and the social media influencer bubble bursts, jfashion and subculture will return to being true subcultures and not just trends and costumes.
@@whalesharksExcuse me, but define "real subculture" to me. Because what it sounds like you're doing is gatekeeping. So according to your logic, gyaru shouldn't be a "real subculture" because it's trendy, some people think kogal is a costume, and there's a certain stereotype that comes with the people who wear the fashion (loud, obnoxious party people). Jirai Kei is not only trendy clothes and makeup, but it's also related to the menhera and wota subcultures. If it's the name Jirai that bothers you, then you can call Fairy Kei "Spank Kei" from now on because apparently it's the same fashion as Fairy Kei evolved from Spank Kei. You need to understand that fashion and names evolve over time and change whether you like it or not. J-fashion subcultures would be irrelevant if it weren't for people on the internet spreading the word about them.
@@makotomodachiI’m not entirely disagreeing but even the director of fruits magazine said the reason the magazine closed was because no one dressed cool in harajuku anymore.
That said I do think the person you’re responding to seems to think these are “subcultures.” They’re not. It’s more like “vibes.” Only a few have a lifestyle attached to it but honestly it’s mainly westerners who get attached to that. Trends come and go. Gyaru was huge in the 90s then again in the late 00s-early 10s then died off. Girly kei took over as the new trend but it’s attached to the mainstream currently, but I predict it may go away as well. Just how fashion works.
@@whalesharksif you think TikTok is ever going to die or the power of influencers is going away, I think you need to come back to reality. Both are here to stay whether you like it or not.
Secondly fashion has always been like this. Most kei styles become famous because people do them and then others copy bc they like it. That’s how fashion grows. “Dolly kei” as it was called in the west became popular because people did it in harajuku for a bit and then it died when no one was doing it anymore. That’s just the cycle of fashion.
アイライン…。
このチャンネルって、前々から微妙な人の出演が多いよね😅