♔ ~~~~| Celebrites Rockin Heat (fly gear/Fly kicks) VOL. 3 | ~~~~ ♔

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:smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin :smokin

If Kanye wore Pacs outfit, yall would call it a dress............................................

and big had a steve harvey suit on. yeah pacs turtlesleeve/neck sweater is type funny, but you're just tryin to incite a riot. :smh:

whats up w/ money's purple/pink paisley silk tho? **** looks player. :smokin

and is that freddie foxxx in the background between pink silk and pac? :nerd:
 
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and big had a steve harvey suit on. yeah pacs turtlesleeve/neck sweater is type funny, but you're just tryin to incite a riot. :smh:

whats up w/ money's purple/pink paisley silk tho? **** looks player. :smokin

and is that freddie foxxx in the background between pink silk and pac? :nerd:

I agree. I'll be the first to say that Pac looks like a fool there. Pac was never particularly renowned for his fashion taste anyway.

Does look like a potential Bumpy Knucks sighting. Not sure though.
 
^^^ Idk fam PAC and big fits both are saying a whole lot of nothing. Glad this was left back in the 90s
 
You have to remember too that this was a sort of transitional phase of hip hop fashion. This was the era when Big, Jay, and Nas were bringing in that Versace style stuff. This was jumping off the "jiggy" era and dudes hadn't yet found their lane.

Personally, I also think this was one of the wacker fashion eras in hip hop history.

Basically, the distance between the fashion culture and "the people" is usually pretty closely related to the distance between the music itself and "the people."

When rappers were rocking fatigues and Timbs, their music was relate able to young people in any hood out there living the hip hop lifestyle. So was their fashion - rappers looked like their fans. As it evolved into pure decadence, the music went further away from the people too - I can't relate to pouring champagne on women on a yacht, or shopping at the Bentley dealership. The jersey era brought something of a return to the streets. The rappers looked like their fans again. Now, this couture stuff reflects the same trendiness and style-chasing, lack of core identity that pervades the music scene. ...We've seen this type of relationship throughout the history of the music, as the dookie rope gave way to the Africa medallion.
 
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You have to remember too that this was a sort of transitional phase of hip hop fashion. This was the era when Big, Jay, and Nas were bringing in that Versace style stuff. This was jumping off the "jiggy" era and dudes hadn't yet found their lane.

Personally, I also think this was one of the wacker fashion eras in hip hop history.

Basically, the distance between the fashion culture and "the people" is usually pretty closely related to the distance between the music itself and "the people."

When rappers were rocking fatigues and Timbs, their music was relate able to young people in any hood out there living the hip hop lifestyle. So was their fashion - rappers looked like their fans. As it evolved into pure decadence, the music went further away from the people too - I can't relate to pouring champagne on women on a yacht, or shopping at the Bentley dealership. The jersey era brought something of a return to the streets. The rappers looked like their fans again. Now, this couture stuff reflects the same trendiness and style-chasing, lack of core identity that pervades the music scene. ...We've seen this type of relationship throughout the history of the music, as the dookie rope gave way to the Africa medallion.

THIS

Lol at pouring champagne on women on yachts...
 
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You have to remember too that this was a sort of transitional phase of hip hop fashion. This was the era when Big, Jay, and Nas were bringing in that Versace style stuff. This was jumping off the "jiggy" era and dudes hadn't yet found their lane.

Personally, I also think this was one of the wacker fashion eras in hip hop history.

Basically, the distance between the fashion culture and "the people" is usually pretty closely related to the distance between the music itself and "the people."

When rappers were rocking fatigues and Timbs, their music was relate able to young people in any hood out there living the hip hop lifestyle. So was their fashion - rappers looked like their fans. As it evolved into pure decadence, the music went further away from the people too - I can't relate to pouring champagne on women on a yacht, or shopping at the Bentley dealership. The jersey era brought something of a return to the streets. The rappers looked like their fans again. Now, this couture stuff reflects the same trendiness and style-chasing, lack of core identity that pervades the music scene. ...We've seen this type of relationship throughout the history of the music, as the dookie rope gave way to the Africa medallion.
Yup I used to rock the DMX dog chain and shaved head in HS
 
You have to remember too that this was a sort of transitional phase of hip hop fashion. This was the era when Big, Jay, and Nas were bringing in that Versace style stuff. This was jumping off the "jiggy" era and dudes hadn't yet found their lane.

Personally, I also think this was one of the wacker fashion eras in hip hop history.

Basically, the distance between the fashion culture and "the people" is usually pretty closely related to the distance between the music itself and "the people."

When rappers were rocking fatigues and Timbs, their music was relate able to young people in any hood out there living the hip hop lifestyle. So was their fashion - rappers looked like their fans. As it evolved into pure decadence, the music went further away from the people too - I can't relate to pouring champagne on women on a yacht, or shopping at the Bentley dealership. The jersey era brought something of a return to the streets. The rappers looked like their fans again. Now, this couture stuff reflects the same trendiness and style-chasing, lack of core identity that pervades the music scene. ...We've seen this type of relationship throughout the history of the music, as the dookie rope gave way to the Africa medallion.

greatest post i've seen on here in a long time.
 
Keep doing your thing kingofny04, always look forward to the videos and interviews.

What Pac is wearing looks NOTHING like the skirts dudes are wearing now.
 
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Keep doing your thing kingofny04, always look forward to the videos and interviews.

What Pac is wearing looks NOTHING like the skirts dudes are wearing now.

Pac was just rockin' an oversize sweater along with oversize pants. The vest is his true size though, so it makes everything else look ridiculously bigger. He wasn't sporting a dress or skirt like these new-age 'rappers'.
 
SKIRT. OVERLY BAGGY SHIRT THAT BASICALLY LOOKS LIKE A SKIRT???

YEA BOTH ARE TRASH.

I DONT CARE IF ITS UR GOD KANYE OR TUPAC ROCKING THEM
 
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yall need to get off your high horses. This man Pac wore a leather corset and a bandana/headwrap like aunt jemima and nobody was trippin back then. Kanye wore a leather kilt and yall say he ruining hip hop culture?

sit down
 
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im gonna have to agree with buddy up there with the pac pic. :rolleyes pac is that guy and i'm all for that thuglife :lol: but that little piece he wearing up there a little off...not to mention the nose ring :lol: pac still :smokin RIP as for ruining hip hop culture i wouldnt specifically pin point a single person but that trukfit wearing fellow and the skinny "trill" guy is on a path towards there.
 
yall need to get off your high horses. This man Pac wore a leather corset and a bandana/headwrap like aunt jemima and nobody was trippin back then. Kanye wore a leather kilt and yall say he ruining hip hop culture?

sit down
Yeah, but the difference is nobody tried to rock it just cuz Pac did. Because we knew it looked ridiculous, regardless of who was rockin it. Now Ye wears a dress and it's "hot".
 
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yall need to get off your high horses. This man Pac wore a leather corset and a bandana/headwrap like aunt jemima and nobody was trippin back then. Kanye wore a leather kilt and yall say he ruining hip hop culture?

sit down

First of all, mainstream hip hop culture - as a culture of the people - been dead since before Kanye first sampled Chaka Khan.

But, truthfully, y;all Kanye defenders have failed to even make the best point in his favor. ...I don't go all that crazy about what dude wears during performances. Yeah, it's weird - but he's a performer. Artists who incorporate "performance" into their artistry wear all kinds of crazy stuff. Some rappers go that route, and others don't. Wearing weird stuff on stage or in videos is nothing new in hip hop. Before Kanye you had any number of characters from The Furious Five, to Kool Keith, to Andre 3000, to X-Clan... whatever. Lady Gaga is a megastar musician who wears wild stuff on stale. Kanye is too. ...Look at what Pac wore in California Love... but nobody was claiming that chainmail and an eye patch was that new swag for the streets.

When I crack on Yeezus, it's all in good fun on his stage show stuff. But, when I really SMH at dude is when he rocks that same kind of stuff on the humble.
 
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not defending anybody, just saying that everybody has their moments. and ye never wore any stage costume in everyday life. you're reaching
 
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