trickle-up
adj. Relating to a fashion trend based on styles seen in the streets or created by independent designers.
Also Seen As
Etymology
Examples
1998
Coolhunters offer what they call "a window on the world of the street" — essential at a time when cool has become "trickle up", where poor black boys in the ghettoes of Harlem can dictate what a middle-class kid in Neutral Bay wears.
—Miranda Devine, “Trendsetters who don't lose their cool,” The Daily Telegraph, May 12, 1998
1998
She makes a persuasive case, for instance, for the influence of street-fashion, generally considered a late century development, as early as the 1940s. The Harlem zoot suit for men was an early example of trickle-up trend.
—Leanne Delap, “Style demands substance,” The Globe and Mail, January 03, 1998
1987 (earliest)
Westwood-watchers can point out other instances of this "trickle-up" phenomenon. Her outsize curvy shapes resurfaced in Claude Montana's big rounded leathers.
—Gerri Hirshey, “She Hoops to Conquer,” The Washington Post, June 07, 1987
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