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#dolette users
miublogsite · 1 month
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𝓊𝓈𝑒𝓇𝓃𝒶𝓂𝑒𝓈 ! ♥︎♡̵̼͓ ꫶᳝᳜᳝᳜᳝᳜৯
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@museforbloom @ribbonbugs
@playthelamb @archivespucca
@sedamiele @cinnebloom
@cisnebouquet @januarybugs
@chaneldollsclub @vogueblogsite
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lovrnya · 2 years
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messy dolette! user's ᵕ̈
๑ coqette ๑ brillergirly ๑ cerisekiss
๑ vanilledollie ๑ ifporcelaine ๑ fleurstar
๑ nailstellar ๑ plushiezita
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chaemingly · 7 months
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ㅤ ˗ˋˏ 𝒰­sers for (𝗜𝗚) 𝗈𝗋 𝘁𝘂𝗺𝗯𝗹𝗿 ˎˊ˗
ㅤ ㅤ 𑄽𑄺ྀ miyntore 𑄽𑄺ྀ cosmiyoun
ㅤ ㅤ 𑄽𑄺ྀ myngore 𑄽𑄺ྀ miyouncis
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s-telar · 2 years
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gaecoo · 11 months
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yeripoison yerismother yerimygirl
myericute 4yeriever lovyerii
golldyeri foryeris badyeris
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chaeaws · 2 years
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Soft moodboard / please like&follow me <3
By: @chaeaws 🫧
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ilytaeil · 2 years
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can you do with this?
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ofc <333
please like/reblog (@^◡^)
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delicategravesoul · 1 year
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sherrysicle · 5 days
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on bows etc.
2023 was the year of putting bows on everything. Labels like Sandy Liang gained immense popularity and designers charged extra for tying ribbons onto everything from bags to jeans. Like many other trends, this was popularised on TikTok, with millions of videos of bows tied on everything from toilet bowls to the muscled arm of someone’s boyfriend.
A year later, most people have moved on. But what seems like just another microtrend on the surface is really just a part of a larger story in fashion, and coquette, the style the trend originated from.
I’ve been around long enough to remember it being popular on Tumblr where it went by “nymphet”, famously from Nabokov’s Lolita. Teenage girls would post carefully curated pictures of cherries, heart-shaped glasses, and retro summer outfits of gingham and denim, along with musings about older men and Lana Del Rey lyrics. The style was very centered around the 1997 adaptation the book, with an obsession around american symbols and being a young, teenage girl. This was until the platform’s NSFW ban, where the tag was banned and users came up with dolette and the more popular coquette, also distancing itself from the controversial novel and film.
With its new name christened, coquette continued on, but it was undoubtedly changing. Many of the original members, now grown up, had mostly abandoned their blogs. Its new home on TikTok, Pinterest and Instagram were more image based and less community focused, so its original culture had been lost. Interestingly, this parallels alternative subcultures. Punk was a movement about primarily music and being anti-establishment, which led to styles like goth and grunge which largely lost the political aspect, or even steampunk and mall goth which is solely fashion based.
Many people look at coquette’s evolution (or devolution, depending on who you ask) negatively. As more people adopted this aesthetic it has lost cultural currency and its status as a niche community. The term itself has been diluted to the point of meaninglessness, and is a catch-all term used to describe an impossibly broad range of feminine aesthetics, from dark and ironic waif style to bright and shiny y2k inspired fashion or even blokette, which adds the contrast of masculine athletic gear.
However, this might not necessarily be all bad. The expansion of what it means to be coquette also means more people are welcomed to this once almost exclusively thin, white, teenage style. 20 somethings wishing to reconnect with their girlhood are dressing in delicate pinks, and as an Asian woman I’ve never felt more included. Original coquette blogs also frequently included posts encouraging disordered eating, and problematic messages romanticising age gap relationships with minors, which was very damaging to the impressionable girls who made up the community.
What remains constant however, is the appreciation of the hyper-feminine in a world that often prioritises the masculine. Whatever you call it, and in every reiteration of the style, I will always be inspired by coquette and numphet aesthetics, and I, for one, will be keeping the ribbons in my hair.
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