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Coachella is having a fashion identity crisis

This year, doppelgangers Amelia Gray and Gabriette took the laid-back approach. Gray was in a white tank and denim boy shorts, while Gabriette opted for her signature Bayonetta glasses, jeans, and a leather bandeau. Über-couple Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce did the same, and while they’ve never been true fashion players, they clearly got the memo that not trying at all was the new trying too hard, turning up in face-covering caps and laundry day leftovers. Elsewhere, Billie Eilish was spotted at Tyler, the Creator’s set going incognito in a black hoodie, later taking the stage in her own extreme baggy sports casuals.

However, on the other end of the spectrum, Paris Hilton floated in wearing lashings of body jewellery, a cowboy hat and matching boots looking very quintessentially Coachella. Megan Fox also made an appearance in her own wicker cowboy hat, one she matched with pale blue beachy waves and denim cutoff shorts. Add a gaggle of influencers like Charli D’Amelio and James Charles to the mix, and it’s clear that a huge divide has emerged: one between those still committed to ‘dressing for a festival’ and those who are just too cool to worry about all that.

To understand how this shift took place, we must first interrogate the psychological conditions from which it arose. The year is 2014, and a new kind of It-girl is emerging. Born from the fires of the v1 Instagram feed, millionaire tweens like Selena Gomez, Hailey Baldwin, the Jenners and Hadids have arrived, flexing their new-found status at the stages of Coachella. Eyebrow-raising bindis abound, as do suede waistcoats, Monsoon-coded jewellery, felt fedoras and printed flares. Skip to 2016, and the clothes may be more refined and a little less dated, but the same codes are still there.

Rather than a subcultural style in and of itself, 2010s Coachella fashion was a rehashing of what the children of Hollywood entertainers thought festival fashion was. The prints and jewellery and floaty dresses were nothing new – a cursory Google search could attest to that. It was these 70s hippie signifiers that were then crudely reinterpreted by those who were, for some, considered arbiters of cool. It’s no surprise that, during this time, it was Hudgens – a perfectly nice but not exactly fashion-forward person – who became the face of this kind of dressing.

As the years ticked on, the style trickled down to the masses, and then the emerging influencer class got their hands on it, watering down even further. Fashion progressed in that time, as did Coachella’s signature style, becoming more streetwear-influenced, but the foundations of maximalism laid by those women stayed the same. So what happens when a style is repeated yearly and comes to have no meaning? What happens when a facsimile of a facsimile becomes the dominant mode of dressing? Well, James Charles turns up in a mullet wig, Martine Rose Nike Shox and a sandblasted denim jacket, apparently. Outfits like this prove “dressing for a festival” has become so diluted people forget why they were making an effort in the first place.

That’s why we’ve found ourselves at this crossroads. The A-listers have to separate themselves from the influencers who still make that effort – they have to signal that they’re somehow different. It’s no surprise, then, that the arbiters of a once-dominant style are switching sides. This year, Kendall Jenner was spotted with a cap pulled firmly over her face, while Hailey Bieber chose to do the same with a silk scarf on top (because nothing says “don’t perceive me” like a leopard print Babouska wrap). Of course, fashions change and people grow up and move on – it certainly isn’t ten years ago anymore. But part of this change is tied up in the need for some to distance themselves from those trying just that little bit too hard. So, if you find yourself in the desert for next weekend’s round, and a festival fit is yet to present itself, which side will you be taking?

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  • Source of information and images “dazeddigital”

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