The phrase “crop top” was not in Laken
Brooks’ vocabulary before March 2020. Months of working from home at the start
of the pandemic, though, gave the 27-year-old PhD candidate a chance to
reevaluate her fashion choices.
اضافة اعلان
So when the chance to own a cropped T-shirt — short
sleeved and charcoal gray with images of wildflowers on the chest — presented
itself, she took it. While for many people, style has been, at best, a
secondary concern during the pandemic, some, like Brooks, found their personal
style.
Before the pandemic, Brooks mostly wore
business-casual wear to teach her students at the
University of Florida in
Gainesville. A couple of weeks into working from home, she decided to step out
of her comfort zone and ordered a pair of leggings, having previously sworn
them off lest they be considered too unprofessional.
She realized that she didn’t feel confident in her
clothes from prelockdown life. Brooks has health issues that create intense
bloating but wore clothes that were uncomfortable for the sake of appearing
professional.
“I was just kind of trying to ignore what I was
wearing and focus on my work,” she said.
While the leggings were comfortable for teaching
from her desk at home, they were also a significant step in her style journey.
This seemingly small act “made me feel comfortable in my body for the first
time,” Brooks said.
(Photos: NYTimes)
Style in solitude
For many, the isolation of
the early pandemic days meant that there was no reason to dress up. Wearing
sweatpants every day of 2020 became a social media trope, and articles about
how the pandemic ruined style abounded. But that solitude is what helped some
people break free of the noise that once influenced their style decisions.
Dressing up during the pandemic was also a form of
control, and dressing up made people feel better, said
Lillian Gray Charles, a
personal stylist in Atlanta.
“We had fewer options for where we can go, where we
could visit people, travel was so much more limited,” Charles said. “Something
that we did have control over is what we put on our bodies.” Clients would
email her to share that getting out of yoga pants and into something more put
together would lift their spirits.
With the structures of
prepandemic life removed for
Amelia Crook, a 43-year-old mother of two, she felt compelled to rediscover her
style a little more than a year after the first significant lockdown. With a
professional background in technology and an affinity for the connecting powers
of TikTok, Crook, who lives in Kyneton, Australia, posted her first video in
May 2021. It was a plea: “Hi, I’m Amelia, I’m 42 and I’ve misplaced my personal
style. And I need you to help me find it.”
“Previously I bought clothes to fit in,” Crook said
in a Zoom interview. “That was a big revelation for me. It was like, I have my
work wardrobe, I have my mom wardrobe, and these are the acceptable things to
wear.” While she didn’t necessarily dislike her clothes before the pandemic,
she realized that she was dressing for others.
With the help of her 127,000 followers, Crook
polished up her style into one that she describes as “structured with feminine
whimsy.” In her videos, Crook tries on outfits composed of clothes from her
closet and new purchases (she likes secondhand clothing from shops like Depop)
and tests out makeup and jewelry while receiving feedback from her followers.
When Crook stepped out in her new outfits, it was
with a better sense of which clothes make her feel good.
“I have a more refined view of how I want to show up
in the world,” she said.
Dressing for joy
The quest for a mood boost is why Sara Camposarcone, 25, embraced her
penchant for maximalism fashion. Before the pandemic, she worked in a sales role
at a technology company in Toronto where she dressed in traditional office
clothing and couldn’t flex her creative chops through style.
Wearing pajamas
every day at the beginning of the pandemic made Camposarcone sad, so she
decided to lean into an exaggerated aesthetic even if she was staying put.
Before the pandemic, her clothes were mostly black and her style was trend
focused, she said.
Months of working from home at the start of the coronavirus pandemic gave the 27-year-old Ph.D. candidate a chance to re-evaluate her fashion choices.
She now wears
vibrant colors, layers, and textures. One of her favorite outfits, for example,
is a yellow suit set with shorts. She wears it with a puppy-print blouse and a
matching vest over the blazer. (Photos: NYTimes)
“Then I also had
a bag that matched the puppy print. It was full puppy look going on. I felt so
cool,” Camposarcone said. “I’d probably rewear that outfit a million times more
because it was too good.” She buys many items secondhand and describes herself
as a sustainable maximalist.
Camposarcone
shares her outfits on TikTok. While some of the comments can be less than kind,
she brushes them off because her outfits bring her joy.
“It’s truly what
I look forward to every day the most,” she said. “I like to plan my outfit
sometimes the night before, and even just putting it together, the excitement I
have doing it is unmatched.”
Dressing for the camera
It wasn’t all puppy blouses and kitten purses when it came to finding
style during the pandemic. For some, it was as simple as streamlining their
style. Alicia Kennedy, 36, a food writer who lives in San Juan, Puerto Rico,
felt more visible than ever when the pandemic took hold. Instead of phone
calls, people suddenly wanted to meet on Zoom. She was also new to San Juan and
wanted to create a visual identity for herself. She began investing in pieces
by sustainable designers like Mara Hoffman and Puerto Rican brands like Luca and
Muns.
Kennedy’s style
evolved from chunky boots and crop tops to oversize white button-down shirts
and bicycle shorts as her work-from-home uniform. When she’s not wearing that,
she’s likely to be found in a slip dress or billowy button-down.
“I’ve come to be
more interested in really simple silhouettes and things that are really
adaptable,” Kennedy said.
When the world
felt chaotic, Kennedy found structure in her outfits even when working from
home.
“Just the idea
that I still needed to get up every day, still needed to work, even if
everything was unpredictable and strange, meant that I needed more of an
identity through what I wore,” she said. “Also, it’s an easy time to just
become absolutely sloppy. So it was kind of a conscious choice just to not do
that.”
For
Camposarcone, experimenting with fashion during the pandemic led her to a new
career. She recently began a marketing role with Cakeworthy, a clothing
company.
For Brooks,
embracing her new look gave her a whole new appreciation for her body.
“Now that I’m
able to try out these different outfits, and especially wearing crop tops, I
realized that I really like my booty,” she said. “It makes me feel that much
more confident in myself.”
Of course, one’s
sense of
style can be a work in progress, Crook said, and the search for it
never really ends. She’s a different person in many ways now than she was five
years ago.
“My kids are older. I’m
not burping babies anymore,” she said. “So it’s an evolution. Something that
will continue, and I’m up for that.”
Read more Fashion