Style Tribes: The Fashion of Subcultures
P**N
Excellent
A beautifully put together book. The depth of research that has gone into this is apparent from the first page to the last. Extremely well written and with some fantastic photography, this really is a superb chronicle of fashion through the decades.Much more than your usual nostalgic trip down fashions memory lane, you get the sense each style tribe had been handpicked with a great deal of thought and care. Yes we have the greasers and rockers but for well known look is balanced with a little bit of lesser known fashion culture - Steam punk or Kogal anyone?Brilliant - buy it you won't be disappointed!
P**E
Know your street style history
Whatever you dress in, someone else from another era, another generation, inspired it. There doesn’t seem to be much in the way of fully realised new looks and sub culture style these days, only nuanced changes on long established themes and styles from previous generations. I feel sorry for this generation, nothing truly to call their own. Since it seems like it’s pretty much all been done, see who got there first and whether you can change it right up. .
D**Y
OMG I love this book
It tells you all the wee different subcultures of fashion since flappers. Obviously, it gives a lot more information after 1950s when the youths went a bit crazy after the WW2 years but I find it so interesting. If you're interested in fashion history, then opening your mind to more than mainstream, crest fantastique!
J**S
A book to cherish, if you are interested in street fashion.
I got this for a girl who I was chatting to at the pub, who designs her own clothes. I’d got it for myself before, from the library. She loved it !; started reading it and couldn’t put it down.
M**S
Enjoyable and Informative.
I already have Ted Polhemus' book 'Street Style' (both versions!)which is fantastic. As an accompaniment to that I really liked this book. It can be seen as a dip-in/dip-out book or a sit down and read book. I like the way it treats flappers as a style tribe. I also like the sections on Japan's street style. One quibble.... It completely ignores Metalheads/Headbangers. and their associated tribes - from Glam Metal to Death Metal, which Ted Polhemus' covers well and which are so important and continue to this day like bikers.. That is the only reason I've given it 4 and not 5 stars.
P**Z
Wonderfull, all my life in a book
all my life in a bookI was born in 1950 and I loved finding in this book all the eras and all the styles that have embellished my life until today.
N**I
Fantastic book
Great book! One of the best investments. Highly recommend.
G**E
So inspirational:)
I read every chapter. Very interesting.
L**A
O produto é inferior ao que eu esperava!
O livro está em perfeitas condições, não está arranhado, nem rasgado, nem amassado, está pronto para devolução como disse, não atendeu as minhas expectativas pois, na descrição do produto dava a entender que era um livro com várias fotografias e ilustrações.
C**Y
good overview of street styles
Style Tribes: The Fashion of Subcultures is a good overview of many street styles and some subcultures. But it lacks in-depth research on any of the groups and styles discussed. Still, it is a strong general reference.
C**E
Could be much better.
A nice start as a style dictionary, but I really think that the 80s and 90s are a bit under presented. The whole Techno Music scene had been far bigger than just ACID House and Goa.Platform shoes. Glitter. Colorful Hair in Bunches. Where is all this ? Maybe it was much to much Mainstream after the Spice Girls to be popular with the author. Looking into the book I got a feeling that all this just comes from the Japanese Fashion Scene.
S**L
This is not the best book on this topic.
As a alt fashion addict I had high hopes for Style Tribes, however soon opening the book and scanning the table of contents I realized that this book had already been written. Ted Polhemus wrote a very, very similar book in 1994 named Street Style. It actually covers more subcultures. So I highly recommend reading the book by Ted Polhemus instead if you can find it.
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