Several new companies are building their businesses around the mainstreaming of androgynous clothing, no longer a passing fad.
Several new companies are building their businesses around the mainstreaming of androgynous clothing, no longer a passing fad.
Androgyny has been a steady part of pop culture for years: Remember David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust in the ’70s, Grace Jones’s flattop hair in the ’80s, Kurt Cobain’s queer grungy looks in the ’90s, and Prince’s endless array of glittery numbers throughout his career?