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Indrė Lukošiūtė

130 Memes All About Makeup, Fashion And The Diva Life

When people talk about the concept that “you can make a meme out of anything,” it tends to be in the context of something very specific and niche, like the particular mom-and-pop restaurants in your town or the trials and tribulations of sophomore year organic chemistry classes. So it shouldn’t come as a surprise that there are just as many memes about something as common as getting dressed up.

The “Glam Together” Instagram Page is dedicated to hilarious and relatable memes about fashion, beauty and just looking glamorous. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote the best ones and be sure to leave your own thoughts and preferences in the comments section down below.

More info: Instagram

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The relationship between memes and fashion has evolved from internet joke to legitimate trend forecasting tool, and honestly, nobody saw that coming except maybe the person who first wore Crocs ironically and accidentally launched a billion dollar comeback.

We've reached a point where major fashion houses monitor meme accounts more closely than traditional fashion magazines, and a single viral TikTok can send thousands of people racing to buy an item that was collecting dust in warehouses mere hours earlier. Welcome to the bizarre timeline where your purchasing decisions are influenced by images with Comic Sans text overlays.

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The phenomenon of meme-driven fashion represents a fundamental shift in how trends spread and evolve. Traditionally, fashion trickled down from runways to magazines to stores over the course of months. Now, someone posts a photo of themselves wearing something ridiculous, it becomes a meme by Tuesday, sells out everywhere by Thursday, and is already considered over by the following Monday.

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Research from the Business of Fashion indicates that social media, particularly meme culture, has compressed trend cycles from years to mere weeks, which is great for engagement but terrible for anyone trying to maintain a consistent personal style or a reasonable credit card balance. The "that girl" aesthetic perfectly illustrates how memes both celebrate and mock trends simultaneously.

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The concept, which involves waking up at 5am to drink lemon water while doing yoga in matching athleisure, became popular and was immediately turned into self-aware memes about the impossibility of maintaining such perfection. Yet despite the mockery, or perhaps because of it, the aesthetic drove massive sales in overpriced water bottles, matching workout sets, and whatever superfood powder promises to transform you into a human Instagram filter. Memes have created a strange cycle where people buy into trends while simultaneously acknowledging through those same memes that the trends are kind of absurd.

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The concept of "dopamine dressing" and maximalist fashion gained traction largely through meme culture's celebration of chaotic, colorful personal style. After years of minimalist beige Instagram aesthetics that made everyone's homes look like sad dentist waiting rooms, memes celebrating clashing patterns and ridiculous color combinations gave people permission to dress like they raided a costume shop during an earthquake.

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Fashion psychologist Dr. Dawnn Karen notes that social media's validation of diverse style expressions, often through humorous meme formats, has genuinely expanded what people feel comfortable wearing in public, which is how we ended up with grown adults wearing dinosaur backpacks to the grocery store.

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The "little treat" meme culture has had a measurable impact on fashion consumption patterns. The joke about deserving "a little treat" for basic life accomplishments like attending a meeting or not crying at work today has been weaponized by fashion retailers into a shopping justification engine. Market research from McKinsey shows that younger consumers increasingly make fashion purchases as emotional self-care, often framing these purchases through meme language about treating themselves. It's behavioral economics wrapped in self-deprecating humor, and it's extraordinarily effective at separating people from their money.

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Celebrity fashion memes have become their own ecosystem, with moments like Rihanna's pregnancy fashion or Harry Styles' bold outfit choices generating immediate meme responses that then influence actual purchasing behavior. When Harry Styles wore a pearl necklace, meme accounts exploded with content, and pearl jewelry sales for men increased by over 50 percent according to retail analytics. The memes didn't just comment on the trend, they actively created and spread it, turning a single red carpet moment into a broader cultural shift.

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Perhaps most fascinating is how fashion brands have started creating meme-friendly moments intentionally. Balenciaga's destroyed sneakers that cost hundreds of dollars were essentially designed to be memed, generating outrage content that functioned as free advertising. The brand understood that people mockingly sharing images of ridiculous expensive items still spreads brand awareness and, paradoxically, often increases desire among those who want to be in on the joke. According to research in the Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management, controversial fashion pieces that inspire meme creation can generate up to three times the social media engagement of traditional advertising campaigns.

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The "micro trend" phenomenon, where specific items like strawberry dresses or bucket hats surge in popularity for brief windows, is almost entirely meme-driven now. These items become visual shorthand in meme formats, which drives recognition and demand, creating a feedback loop where the meme popularity and fashion popularity reinforce each other until everyone suddenly owns the same thing and immediately regrets it.

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