No New Fashions in the Future

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Yeoman Rand models: the look of the twenty-third century.

Sometimes creators of works of speculative fiction make up all kinds of futuristic machinery and even architecture, but do not bother to create futuristic-looking fashions for their characters, instead opting to use contemporary styles. This creates an effect similar to that of Zeerust, in which the style of the work seems dated not because they were trying to look futuristic, but because they couldn't see beyond their own contemporary looks.

Sometimes it is justified in some specific things, like how many modern hairstyles have been around for centuries (often pointed out in movies), and how men's suits have changed remarkably little in over 140 years (albeit going from casual sporting wear, to business dress, to the most formal thing many men will ever put on). On top of that, jeans have been the youth's casual trousers of choice in North America for some sixty years now (almost a trope of its own). But this isn't the case once enough time has passed. Just compare how different medieval and Roman styles looks from each other; logically fashion two hundred or so years from now on will be just as different. Or just compare women's fashions of 1900 to now.

Anyone who thinks "but fashions don't really change that quickly, so why bother?" needs to take a look at the history of fashion.

Compare Popular History, Twenty Minutes Into the Future, Fashions Never Change, Modern Stasis. Contrast Space Clothes.

Examples of No New Fashions in the Future include:


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Top-rated comment: That chick looked more 80's than Ronald Reagan watching The Breakfast Club


Anime and Manga

  • The original Bubblegum Crisis anime, released in 1987 and set in the year 2032, features clothes and hairstyles that are so stereotypically 1980s that you'd almost think it was a parody.
    • Megazone 23 suffers from extreme 80's fashion as well, complete with a pop-music idol singing a cheezy dance ballad.
      • Justified in this case, as the characters believe it actually is the eighties.
  • The original Mobile Suit Gundam was pretty bad about this. Despite being set around a century into the future most clothes the civilians wore are no different from those available in the late 1970s.
    • Gundam Seed, Gundam Wing & G Gundam have even more anachronistic costumes.
      • At least in Wing, it's only the people who are trying to take over the world who are anachronistic. This may be intentional. The military people wear uniforms that look about right, and normal people wear, well, normal clothing.
      • In the case of Wing, though, it still looks as though regular fashions stopped in the present day, if not fallen back to the 1950s. As for SEED, they tried making some of the civilian attire futuristic...though it could come off as weird.
    • An example from Mobile Suit Gundam 00: My dad owned a jacket that looked kind of like the vest Lockon the First wore, except with sleeves, naturally.
    • In Mobile Suit Gundam 00 the fashions are almost identical with modern ones with one major exception: it seems acceptable for men in all positions of society, including military, young and old alike to have long hair. Most men are still short-haired, but long hair appears to no longer have anti-authoritarian or effeminate connotations.
  • The Second volume of Osamu Tezuka's Phoenix series actually gives a pretty brilliant (and tragic) justification for this. People living in a Crapsack World that has seen the near complete destruction of Earth's ecology & the apparent failure of a space colonization program that was supposed to save the human race have given up hope for the future & spend their lives trying to relive the past. This trope is taken to truly ludicrous levels in the manga, where not only do people wear mostly ordinary looking modern clothes of various fashion eras as well as more classical Victorian finery & even togas, there are also people who dress up in medieval armor or wear animal skins like a caveman. Since this book was written in the late 50s/early 60s, the Space Clothes that the officials wear also look anachronistic to modern eyes, which gives their constant bemoaning of people's nostalgic tendencies a layer of irony.
  • Everybody in Cowboy Bebop looks vaguely 70s. They also listen to music that was fashionable in 1970s, and much of the technology is designed by the aesthetics of the era, as well, even though it's vastly more advanced. And the time it's set in? 2070s. The show seems to play with the idea of fashions going in circles.
  • The main characters and motorcycle gangs in Akira all wear clothing that is very reminiscent of The Eighties.
  • In Tokyo Crazy Paradise, 90's fashion has apparently remained dominant for a good 30 years.
  • Justified in Legend of the Galactic Heroes, at least for the inhabitants of the Reich, whose fashions range from the 18th to early 20th Century. Those in the Free Planets Alliance, on the other hand, wouldn't look too out of place in modern-day America, while many on Phezzan seem to like The Eighties.


Comics

  • Most of the regular citizens in Judge Dredd wear either Space Clothes or weird punk-inspired getup; indeed, Max Normal is seen as odd because he wears an 80s business suit. However, the gangsters in the first few years tended to wear stereotypical 80s gangster gear - pinstripe or corduroy suits, and trilbies.
  • A strip in Gotlib's Rubrique-à-Brac depicts the projected evolution of fashion starting from the Nineties: going back to Renaissance, then medieval, then Roman armor, then Gallic clothes, then cavemen furs.


Film

  • In The Man Who Fell to Earth, the characters grow from youth into old age, but it's always the 70s in terms of clothes, hair, music, cars, etc.
  • Sunshine, set a hundred years into the future, has Searle wearing Ray-Ban sunglasses.
    • Ray-Bans have been in production since 1937. It's not all that unlikely that they will still be around after 170 years.
  • Logan's Run, set in a hi-tech far-future city where the inhabitants—those who are wearing clothes—look as though they've just stepped out of a '70s-era disco. This is arguably the most depressing aspect of the movie's dystopian society.
  • Don't forget RoboCop, although that was, in many ways, a parody of contemporary society made in the 1980s.
  • 2010: The Year We Make Contact was made in 1984, and is dated, but the clothing worn in the film is still pretty similar to what people wear today (space suits aside) so it's justified for the most part.
    • Indeed, the American space suits were designed to look more like space suits used today[1] rather than the ones from 2001.
    • Helen Mirren's perm is an example of Eighties Hair, and seems unusual for a colonel in the Soviet Air Force.
    • Dave Bowman's wife Betty wears a Flashdance-style off-the-shoulder T-shirt, which actually came back into fashion in 2010.
    • There are people in the 2000s and 2010s who still wear glasses like Dr. Chandra's.
  • In Meet the Robinsons, which takes place only 30 years from when the film was released, people have flying cars and robot buddies... but kids still wear jeans, t-shirts, and Converse All-Stars. Huh.
    • To be fair, kids were wearing that thirty years ago, as well.
      • And thirty years before that. And so on...and so on...All-Stars were invented in the early 1910's. More an example of likely Real Life.
  • Largely averted in Back to The Future Part II's overblown and very tongue-in-cheek vision of 2015, but early in the movie Doc Brown gives Marty a set of modern clothing...which looks almost exactly like his regular clothes, except that it's electronic and automatically adjusts its size. One size fits all, indeed!
    • Marty Jr. also wears a color-shifting baseball cap and has to imitate the fad of wearing their pants inside out by turning his pockets out. Even funnier once way-too-big pants became popular. Though not so funny later, when way-too-small pants became popular.
    • Don't forget Marty Sr. as well as a few others wearing two ties at once. And the Doc's see-through tie.
  • The original Rollerball and Death Race 2000. Very 70s look in the Game of Death future.
  • Aliens has this, with the curly hairstyles of Ripley and Newt's mother. Also, In The Future business suits are worn with the shirt collars turned up.
  • Soylent Green is so '70s it hurts.
  • Star Wars has this on some planets. While many people wear robes or bulky Space Clothes, there are many that wear something that resembles our clothing. Dexter Jettster, the diner owner in Episode II, wears something you'd expect a diner owner today to wear, albeit with an extra pair of sleeves. Otherwise, Star Wars is pretty good about averting this trope with clothes, although the characters' hair is incredibly 70s/80s in the Old Trilogy.
    • The clothes of Obi-Wan Kenobi were inspired by samurai costumes, with a dash of robed wizard. (Since it was essentially a fantasy "long long ago" and it's not really supposed to be futuristic, this makes some sense; there were also characters who did not wind up in the finished film wearing cloaks and carrying magic swords ... err, lightsabers.) Jedi characters who turned up later all followed a similar trend to Obi-wan. However, Amidala's extravagant costumes in the newer trilogy are pretty original, and young Obi-wan even lampshades this by remarking that her wardrobe is the most valuable thing on their spaceship.
  • Applies to the humans in Avatar, set in 2154. Apparently, progress stopped after 2003.
    • This also applies to military uniforms. Apparently, modern military fatigues are still standard 150 years from now, even though, historically, uniforms can change pretty fast.
  • In a post-apocalyptic future of Steel Dawn, people still have mullets.
    • This is at least somewhat plausible, as mullets were a common hairstyle as far back as Ancient Greece.
  • The Running Man. It's set in 2017, but the clothes scream 80s (not that that's a bad thing). Just look at the leotards worn by the dancers at the beginning of the game show. Then there's the earrings on some of the female audience members, the sweater on Killian's make-up guy...
  • Star Trek is generally good at averting this, but there are two notable exceptions: Kirk's brother wearing 2009 era skinny jeans and, in what is most likely an example of the Grandfather Clause, Sixties era miniskirts for female Starfleet uniforms.
  • Somewhat averted in Bicentennial Man, which clearly shows fashions change over its 200-year timeframe. Granted, suits, jeans and tuxedos seem largely preserved in that time, which can look jarring compared to the more futuristic styles.
  • There's a movie version of The Picture of Dorian Gray that was made in the early 1970's, set in the early 1970's, and which features the title character living agelessly over the span of about 20 years. Somehow the fashions never seem to evolve during that time.
  • In Time takes place at least one hundred years in the future (one character mentions being 105). Cops ("Timekeepers") now dress like they're in the Matrix, and there were some unusual outfits worn by the rich women, but in the ghetto everyone dresses like it's 2011 and even the more "unique" outfits worn in New Greenwich are the kind of thing a bold person might wear today, not exactly futuristic. Maybe it's some kind of comment on how fashion progress has stopped due to the lack of overturn among the kinds of wealthy people who would be setting the fashions?

Literature

  • Lampshaded in Margaret Peterson Haddix's novel, Turnabout. The two heroines, who have been reverse-aging since they were centenarians in the year 2000, are now in their mid-teens hanging out in a club in the 2080s when the book begins. One of them remarks how fashion seems to continuously go through the same 40-year cycle, and that currently, 1970s fashions are back in style again.
    • But that would suggest that '70s fashions were remarkably like that of the 1930s, and that was not so.
  • Averted (oddly) in Swallowdale, the sequel to Swallows and Amazons, when the children leave a time capsule and specifically mention that "it probably won't be found for many years...when people wear quite different sorts of clothes".
  • Walter Jon Williams' 1986 Cyberpunk novel Hardwired:

Her sculpted face is pale, the Florida tan gone, her eyes black-rimmed. Her almost-black hair is short on the sides and brushy on top, her nape hair falling in two thin braids down her back. Chrome steel earrings brush her shoulders. Firebud has broadened her already-broad shoulders and pared down the width of her pelvis; her face is sharp and pointed beneath a widow’s peak, looking like a succession of arrowheads, the shaped-charge that Cunningham demands. She wears black dancing slippers laced over the ankles and dark purple stretch overalls with suspenders that frame her breasts, stretching the fabric over the nipples that Firebud has made more prominent. Her shirt is gauze spangled with silver; her neck scarf, black silk.

  • In the early chapters of Dragon's Egg, the book takes the time to highlight the fact that main female protagonist in the year 2020 is so odd that she doesn't usually wear skirts! *gasp*
  • Return From the Stars averts this - in the future, all clothes are made from foam that is sprayed onto the body and hardens quickly. They're also completely expendable, since you can rip off your garment whenever you're bored with it and spray on a new one (though there are also professionals who spray fashionable clothes onto you with expertise.) The clothes also have a whole lot of exotic decorations - feathers, sparkles, animated eyes, etc.
  • The uniforms in Honor Harrington tend to be not to different from a modern military uniform though Manties go in for berrets rather then brimmed saucer-caps.

Live Action TV

  • The page picture comes from Star Trek: The Original Series, wherein women all across our futuristic Federation wear gogo boots, mini-skirts, and beehives that could trap small children as their work clothes. As we get further and further away from The Eighties, there's no doubt that Star Trek: The Next Generation's outfits will eventually look just as awful.
    • They look awful now. Those shoulder pads - yeck!
    • Enterprise tries to avert this, for the most part. Apparently, Starfleet officers still wear modern Navy-style uniforms in the 22nd Century.
    • Star Trek has always been hit and miss with civilian clothing. The TOS movies, excluding The Motion Picture, had some distinctive uniforms which didn't look 70's or 80's and the civilian clothes weren't too set in the era. TNG, DS 9 and VOY's uniforms were fine, but the civilian clothes... oh god the some of the outfits were just awful. At least for the humans. The choice to make clothing culture specific for DS 9 worked well for the distinctive styles of the Bajorans, Cardassians, Ferangi, etc, and so they don't look like 90's clothing.
      • TOS clothes do not look like uniforms, or even like particularly nice civilian clothes. They look in fact like casual middle-class dress and a typical office worker a few decades ago would wear better stuff on the job. DS9 however shows some improvement. They do at least look sort of like uniforms and not conspicuously awful ones.
    • Klingons go in for ceremonial armor and more to the point what looks more like armor of some periods of European history(Japanese armor by contrast looks far more odd).
  • The Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode "Riding With Death" (a "movie" cobbled together from episodes of Gemini Man) supposedly takes place ten years after it was made in the mid-70s, but all the characters look like they are getting ready to go to the Bicentennial.
  • Sorta-applied in the 2000s Battlestar Galactica; despite being set A Long Time Ago in a Galaxy Far Far Away, with no apparent historical connection to Earth, Colonial fashion is almost identical to that of 2000s Earth. The motif was chosen partly to make the characters easier to relate to, and partly since buying from thrift stores is cheaper than designing original costumes.
    • The prequel Caprica, despite having some Post Cyber Punk level technology features 1950's clothing. Interestingly, it's set about 50 years before the 2000s-fashioned Battlestar. Word of God says this is deliberate.
      • The 1940's and 1950's fashions (and certain other aesthetics like cars, radios and cigarette lighters) also seem to coexist with Punk Punk fashions in the V World. Whether this is limited to the V World or not remains to be seen, but flashbacks to life on Caprica from Battlestar sometimes feature alternative fashions for religious groups and other subcultures. And by BSG's 4th season, the contemporary fashions were giving way to Mad Max-style refugees in the fleet.
  • Going quite the other way, the 1993 miniseries Wild Palms, set a decade into the future, depicted the prevailing fashions as Edwardian.
  • Though the old Doctor Who favoured Space Clothes, the new series seems to have some rather mundane clothes for the future. Case in point: the 2005 series finale, set in the year 200,100, features office drones identical to today's.
    • Defied in The Ark with those streamer outfits.
    • In The Dalek Invasion of Earth, made in 1964, set about 200 years in the future, humans in Dalek-occupied London wear '60s clothes. But they wear work clothes, as befits these grizzled survivors, not trendy suits or hippie clothes or anything, so it's a lot less dated.
  • Babylon 5 steered between this trope and Space Clothes: human civilian clothes were obviously derived from modern-day fashions, but were just different enough, with men wearing suit coats with no lapels over band-collared shirts with no tie. The suit coats were often purchased at a second-hand store, with the costume department removing the lapels, and the band-collared shirts actually were in style during a brief period when B5 was on the air, but the effect still manages to look "futuristic" without looking goofy.
    • However, womens' fashions were little different from real world trends during the run of the series.
      • In fairness, women's fashion tends to be nigh-impossible to predict (with the possible exception of the Little Black Dress). Men's fashion (or at least Western Business Attire and its close relatives), on the other hand, has consisted of different variations on the suit and tie since at least the 1860s, and follows a general trend of simplifying things (over time, we've switched out the separate collar for one integrated into the shirt, converged on the four-in-hand necktie,[2] lost the hat, gotten rid of the pocket watch, simplified the suit jacket itself, and mostly shed the waistcoat/vest; the only real change in the opposite direction is the spread of pleated pants circa 1920). It would make sense for mens' suits 260 years in the future to be further simplified, while the lack of change in women's fashion is probably the costume designers saying, "we give up, we're just going to do what's cheapest."
      • Woment's fashions weren't much different, but they still had some grace notes, like a very distinctive neckline that left a section of exposed skin.
      • Centauri in B5 look vaguely like Italian or French nobles of the Early Modern period. Hand one a cloak and a rapier and tell him to join the Three Musketeersand he would not look at all odd.
      • Delenn just looks gorgeous as befits her lineage, status, and ambassadorial mission(which requires a lot of showing off).
    • Similarly with the civilian clothes of human characters in Star Treks II, III, IV and V. The burgundy jacket looks like a formal uniform and has realistic "field" variants, and the civilian clothes that the main crew wore were interesting but wouldn't seem too out of place today, even Uhura's traditional African clothes in Star Trek III.
      • Unfortunately, civilian clothes in the first Star Trek movie (as well as the original series), as seen in San Francisco circa 2271, were egregious examples of Space Clothes.
      • During preproduction for IV, there was concern about how much they'd have to make the characters worry about their wardrobes. They concluded that they could walk around San Francisco in full dress uniform and not attract second looks. How? By having the actors do so for a week.
  • Firefly went the other direction with this trope, using old west fashions for most of the characters, with only occasional futuristic or contemporary twists. On the other hand, upper-class Persephone used a distinctively Regency-esque set of fashions, down to tight pants for the men at formal occasions (which annoyed Mal to no end).
  • The Twilight Zone featured a lot of speculative stories set in the near and distant future. Although they sometimes got creative with the clothing (space jumpsuits, shiny leotards, etc.) the hairstyles were usually mired in the buzzcutted, beehived, wave-permed styles of the 50's and 60's.

Tabletop Games

  • The Gothic fashions amongst humans in Warhammer 40,000 appear to be part of the game's visual appeal.
  • Averted in White Wolf's Trinity game, where much of the artwork featured speculative fashion and architecture.
  • Terrans in Traveller: Intersteller Wars look fairly normal. Vilani look odd. Both look handsome-they are good clothes. But Vilani have strange clothes.

Video Games

  • Mass Effect's clothing style is "just future enough" to feel future-y without heading into silliness. Even if the colors were a bit eye-straining on some of the outfits.
    • In addition, whilst onboard the Normandy, Shepard, Ashley, and Kaiden wear an outfit consisting of a T-shirt, cargo pants, and boots. Judging from the second game, this is essentially military utilities.
    • Men's business suit has gained a wider, square collar with a high-collared shirt, the tie has been lost altogether and the colour schemes have become a lot more variable than in the present day.
  • Flashback. Conrad wears jeans, a brown leather jacket, sneakers, and an undershirt that is pink in-game but changes to white during cutscenes. The game takes place in 2142.
  • Tragically played with in the Fallout series, most notably Fallout 3. It's been 200 years since nuclear Armageddon, but most of the townies you encounter are still wearing pre-Great War fashions, mostly held together with darning thread and good intentions. Wastelanders, Scavs and Raiders, on the other hand, tend to wear cobbled-together but functional attire (long sleeves, cargo pants, boots, wide-brimmed hats—the better to protect you from that post-ozone sunshine), and the non-armored members of the Brotherhood of Steel wouldn't look out of place at a Renaissance Faire. Justified Trope in that the Brotherhood is heavily based in knightly legend, and the rest of civilization is presumed to have more or less stopped in the heavily 50's-flavored period of 2077.
  • Deus Ex: Clothes are still pretty much modern, although the MJ12 troopers and UNATCO troopers have battle armor from Twenty Minutes in The Future.
  • Halo: Reach had some pretty cool designs for civilian fashion during pre-production. But this is what they look like in the final game. This carries over the UNSC uniforms as well. While their troops' armor looks reasonably advanced, their uniforms are virtually identical to those of the United States military today.


Web Animation

  • "It's gonna look like Whore World: like a whore-world. But it might only LOOK like a world of whores. Unfortunately."

Chimmy-Chummy on the fashion of the future, from Brad Neely's web animations.


Western Animation

  • The residents of 31st Century New New York in Futurama wear clothes very similar to 20th Century New York - as Fry, originally from 1999, doesn't look that out of place. There are subtle differences however, but not too obvious.
    • This may be due to cyclic fashions: at one point the Planet Express crew go to a club where everyone wears glowing rings because they used to be fashionable but they aren't anymore. Fry is shushed when he admits he thinks they look cool.
      • Or is more likely a parody of this trope- the retro-futurist setting of Futurama is essentially advanced technology and aliens inserted into a largely present-day society, a deliberate parody of that tendency in older science fiction.
    • Also of note: A Past-O-Rama cast member mistakes Fry for a coworker because of his "ridiculous costume".
    • Also, women's clothing of the 31st century appears mainly to have become a bit more Stripperiffic than the 21st century (which is already more stripperific than the early 20th and early 19th centuries). The authors may be demonstrating a "Law of Fashion": that as history drags onward, the only constant is women showing more cleavage.
    • Futurama in general averts this, save for the episode Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles. The normally over-one hundred Professor Farnsworth is at first simply 50-something with no particular fashion change, but after a Phlebotinum Breakdown that causes the cast to de-age even more, he rapidly goes through stages of fashion and speech that correspond with the 70s, the 60s, the 50s etc. Works okay.
  • Averted by the early-90s mecha series Exo Squad. Practically all humans of the late 21st century, men and women alike, have at least part of the sides of their head shaved, and often in a manner far-removed from any current-day style.
    • This was probably to partly express the fact that most human characters were military or partisan to begin with. In many cases, they wouldn't have been too out of place on a US military installation back in the 90s. For the civilians, an easy explanation as well...parasite control. It was done somewhat, to show just how much a Crapsack World it was there.
  • Half-averted in Batman Beyond. Most fashions seen aren't too varied from what we see now - for instance, Nelson Nash still sports a classic high school letterman's jacket - but as can be seen in this screenshot, there's been at least a slight shift. Commonplace colors are different, like brighter blues and oranges for everyday working citizens. And then there's the subtle-but-big change, which is that almost all men's suits are streamlined to the point of having no extraneous parts or flaps. Bruce Timm himself lampshades this in one of the DVD special features, saying that their big fashion statement of the future was "a world without lapels".
    • The one notable exception to the lapel rule, in fact, is Terry McGinnis, whose regular brown jacket sports a little lapel/collar on it.
  • Subverted in the episodes of The Simpsons that take place in the future. Most of the older versions of characters wear clothes similar to their normal outfits, but with subtle changes for some i.e. upturned collar, rings on the shoulders, Homer's shirt looks like George Jetsons, etc.
  1. They were even made with the same kind of $200/yard Teflon-coated fabric that real space suits use
  2. Although not necessarily the four-in-hand knot