Mom jeans is an informal term for a type of women's jeans worn in the 1980s and early 1990s, considered to be unfashionable and unflattering according to some opinions. They have since reemerged as a fashionable trend for young women in the 2010s.
Video Mom jeans
Overview
This style usually consists of a high waist (rising above the belly button), making the buttocks appear disproportionately longer, larger, and flatter than they otherwise might. It also tends to have excess space in the zipper/crotch and leg areas. The jeans are usually in a solid, light-blue color, with no form of stone washing or fading.
Other attributes of the style often seen are pleats, tapered legs, and elastic waistbands. The style is often accompanied by a blouse or shirt that is tucked into the jeans. This style of jeans was popular with women in the United States until the early 2000s, when lower rise jeans started to become fashionable.
Mom jeans became popular with young fashionable women once again in the 2010s.
Maps Mom jeans
Saturday Night Live
The term gained greater prominence after a May 2003 Saturday Night Live skit (written by Tina Fey) for a fake brand of jeans called Mom Jeans, which used the tagline "For this Mother's Day, don't give Mom that bottle of perfume. Give her something that says, 'I'm not a woman anymore...I'm a mom!' "
Dad jeans
A corresponding term, dad jeans, has been coined in popular media to refer to an unflattering, high-waisted and shapeless style of jeans often worn by middle-aged U.S. men. This term has been used occasionally since 2009, when President Barack Obama was depicted as wearing such jeans during the 2009 Major League Baseball All-Star Game. In March 2015, Obama appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live! for the "Mean Tweets" segment, in which he read a Tweet mocking him over the jeans. Jimmy Kimmel comes out, wearing high-waisted jeans, and attempts to defend them.
References
External links
- Saturday Night Live Mom Jeans skit (May 10, 2003), retrieved 2013-02-07
- Deb Acord (June 11, 2006), Wearer beware of "mom jeans", The Seattle Times, retrieved 2008-05-08
- Carol Band, A Household Word: Mom Jeans, parenthood.com, retrieved 2008-05-08
Source of article : Wikipedia