- Joined
- Sep 26, 2019
"nostalgia"
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View attachment 3068739
This isn't nostalgia, it's just a pile of random old shit that was made between 1988 and 1999. Nobody who listened to Nirvana or Metallica was buying Tiger Beat or Spice World posters. And there's no actual home decorating idea expressed here, it's just clutter piled up on what looks like a low budget soap opera set.
Frosty_Glass mentioning seeing people born in the late 90s being into this sort of nostalgia gumbo aesthetic, and that made me realize something: if you were a toddler at the end of a period of a certain kind of culture or fashion, it'll get logged in your brain as something vague and mysterious, that you never fully understood, yet it's especially interesting because it was gone before you could really comprehend it. Things like this will stand out to you, and you'll see remnants of stuff you remember throughout your life, like assorted clothes and knick-knacks at thrift stores, magazines at used bookstores, and reruns on TV. Combine those with seeing advertisements like this:a lot of these people really weren't that old during the time. I always see people born in the late 90s saying how they're a 90's baby and are obsessed with it. why? you were like four and you remember this? this whole 90's aesthetic vibe bullshit is cringe. "Imagine yourself, it's 98 and you are going over to your friend's house to play on his N64 and drink some HI-C". I never really understand it. it's also odd since most of these people wouldn't like it anyway. dial up internet, no smartphones, and no one is going you call you by your chosen pronouns. c'mon, drop the whole "this decade is my personality" shit.

and your mind sort of pieces together what a kid's room in that time might have looked like, because you're imagining it through rose-tinted glasses. That's what those ads in @Maggots on a Train v2's more or less are, manifested into reality.
Of course, any of us could tell you that those aren't at all what kids' rooms of the 90s looked like. Most of the furniture would be old hand-me-downs, and I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of it still is, considering how much 21st century furniture is just MDF junk.
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