The Controversial 2000s Fashion Trends Making a 2024 Comeback
Baguette bags and low-rise jeans don't just offer nostalgia; they're inspiring outfits.
As a mid-’90s baby, the early aughts were my formative fashion years. Nearly every wardrobe malfunction, fashion risk, or otherwise chaotic clothing choice I made took place between 2000 and 2010. So, imagine my surprise when, as a nearly 30-year-old, I noticed that many of the most controversial fashion trends from the 2000s were suddenly cool again for fall 2024. While they were cringe in the early aughts, even fashion experts agree: some of them are surprisingly chic.
Michelle Finamore, a fashion historian and curator, has a few ideas about why these trends are making a fierce comeback. Her top theory? Nostalgia. “I always look to pop culture television and film for clues,” she tells Marie Claire over email, citing Gilmore Girls, Sex and The City, and Grey’s Anatomy as of-the-time references. Now that the original viewership has gotten older, they finally have the funds to tap into the trends they wish they could have worn all those years ago. Oh—and our time chronically spent online may also be to blame. “Social media and TikTok have changed the game—there is such an overabundance of vintage styling from all decades that is constantly accessible online,” she says.
Avid scrollers aren’t the only ones with a knack for looking back right now. Popular trends from the era dominated the runways for the Fall 2024 season. Low-rise jeans were one of the biggest denim trends, with brands like Miu Miu and Balenciaga all offering their take on the style. Oversized logo designer belts were spotted at Chloé and Louis Vuitton, and dresses were unexpectedly styled over trousers and leggings on the runways of David Koma and Proenza Schouler. Collina Strada took it further, layering psychedelic printed mini skirts over pants.
One of the stylists carrying the movement forward is Tabitha Sanchez, who works with burgeoning It-girls like Ashtin Earle and Chloe Cherry. In her opinion, tapping into the resurgence doesn’t mean you have to forfeit the wardrobe you’ve worked so hard to build since the decade ended. “I don't think any of the trends have to be controversial,” she says. “It's all about picking and choosing what works for you and incorporating it into your personal style.”
Ready for your mini nostalgia trip? Keep scrolling to see the best early-aughts-inspired trends officially back in 2024.
Dresses Over Pants
As soon as I saw Gigi Hadid wearing a white sweater dress over the top of a pair of blue jeans, I knew that the dress-over-trouser look was back. The Fall 2024 runways only confirmed my inkling. "There are so many ways to style a dress over jeans. You can do a cool sheer dress with a bralette over jeans and a strappy heel or sneakers," says Sanchez. "Alternatively, style a mini bubble skirt dress with a corset on top and baggy pants."
Low-Rise Jeans
Don't totally dismiss the low-rise jeans style. Kaia Gerber, modern-day It-girl, is a fan of the look and wears it often. But you don't have to be a member of Gen Z to get it right. While slimmer-fitting styles were popular on the runway, I recommend a more forgiving, baggy, jeans-centric fit. "I see them everywhere," says Finamore. And the trend is likely to have legs for 2025, too.
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Statement Belts
Belts are back, baby! Now try saying that three times fast. Statement-making belts were a signature of early-aughts fashion. They were often low-slung around the hips of teen icons like Mischa Barton or Paris Hilton and emblazoned with statement-making buckles and logos. They're now a little more refined—but just as bold.
Baguette Bags
It doesn't get cuter than a teeny baguette or east-west bag tucked underneath your shoulder—ask Fendi and Miu Miu. The mini shape is everywhere yet again, and for good reason. The girls need going-out bags that only hold a phone, a wallet, a set of keys, and some lip gloss.
Meet The Experts
Michelle Tolini Finamore, Ph.D., is Salem, Massachusetts-based fashion curator and historian who has curated exhibitions ranging from Fashioning America: Grit to Glamour (2022-3), Gender Bending Fashion (2019), #techstyle (2016), Think Pink (2014) and taught fashion, film and design history. She has lectured widely and written for both the scholarly and popular press and has a special interest in fashion in film.
Celebrity stylist Tabitha Sanchez' fashion career kicked off while working as an intern in New York as a teenager, which quickly led to her assisting some of the top names in fashion. Tabitha’s work encapsulates the boldness of Gen Z Fashion and she’s since made a name for her own with an impressive client roster of some of fashions rising stars, including Chloe Cherry, Quen Blackwell, Isan Elba, Larray, Courtney Mawhorr, Iris Apatow and Lil Huddy to name a few. Tabitha's work has graced the pages of Vogue, L’Official, CR Fashion Book, Who What Wear, Popsugar and more.
Julia Marzovilla is the Fashion E-Commerce Editor at Marie Claire, where she reviews the latest launches from fashion and beauty brands, finds the best on-sale items around the internet, and interviews experts to find the best products in any category to share with her readers. She also creates shopping guides that span every vertical on the site as an expert in everything from the best laptop bags to the best laser hair removal devices.
In her near decade of experience, Julia has both written for several top outlets in the E-Commerce space and worked at major fashion labels. Prior to joining the Marie Claire team, she contributed similar shopping stories to sites such as Bustle, InStyle, The Zoe Report, Who What Wear, and worked as the Trending Fashion and News Writer STYLECASTER. You can find her across the internet at @JuliaMarzovilla. In real life, you can find her creating shopping guides for her friends, cooking or baking in her too-small kitchen, or buying tickets for the next time Harry Styles is in town.
Julia has a Bachelor’s degree in English with a minor in Journalism from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California. She lives in New York City, her hometown.
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