February 22, 2025
Fall 2025’s Y2K Fashion Trends, According to an Elder Millennial Fashion Director

In fashion magazines, those of us who’ve been around a while can’t help but reminisce about how things “used to be.” We had more of everything—budgets, magazines, and controversial jean trends. In the early 2000s, Fashion Weeks (and the weeks that turned into months in Milan and Paris) looked similar in many ways and different in others. Models and socialites sat where influencers sit now; but now and then, they were hardly size-inclusive. Tax brackets also distinguished personal style: uptown girls had a uniform, downtown girls had another, and the two did not meet—unless you count running into each other (and Chloë Sevigny or an Olsen Twin) late at night at the Beatrice Inn.

I was slogging through an intern-to-closet-assistant rite of passage, but I felt that collective whoosh when the entire fashion world decamped to Bryant Park and then hopped a plane to Europe. Back at HQ, we assistants basically ran a logistical orchestra—booking town cars, juggling seating charts, and begging PR assistants on the curly-corded office phone for a first-row upgrade for a senior report on the team. And that was before tackling the faxes of lookbooks and digital camera mania: charging devices, dumping memory cards, and scribbling notes on VIP looks to request for the next issue’s cover shoot with fierce determination.

The Fall 2000 catwalk straddled two centuries, mirroring a cultural pivot from ‘90s minimalism into a whole new millennium. Designers played with metallic fabrics, bolder color codes, and a fresh take on ’70s boho, capturing both the anticipation and the uncertainty of the Y2K years to come.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Brands)

Then, everything changed practically overnight, and Instagram (now Meta) turned Fashion Week into a global spectacle. Editors who once wrote at leisurely paces (deadline? That was, like, a week away!) suddenly posted live updates before the models even stepped off the runway. Shows were live-streamed, captions were typed out on an iPhone with an index finger, and anyone with a screen—on their couch or halfway across the world—could join the front row. That fast-forward effect drastically shortened the trend cycle, too. In the time it takes to refresh your feed, a new viral It-Bag can be declared over—unless you’re in Copenhagen, where vintage and sustainability persevere.

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