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San Jose teenagers pan fashion microtrends

San Jose teenagers are criticizing fashion microtrends for driving overconsumption, environmental harm, and expense, with many saying the short-lived styles promoted by social media algorithms lead to bullying and waste. Some young people defend the trends as fun, but critics urge peers to follow their own style instead.

read3 min views1 publishedJun 24, 2026
San Jose teenagers pan fashion microtrends
Image: Mercurynews (auto-discovered)

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Teenagers and young adults in the San Jose area are speaking out against the popular microtrend fashion culture for the environmental repercussions and expense of keeping up with it all.

“I hate microtrends because it’s just overconsumption,” said 15-year-old Naman Dhanoa.

The term “microtrend” holds similar meaning to a “fad” or “craze,” distinguished by a short span of popularity, as well as where it all comes from: the algorithm. Social media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok learn what is popular and feed the latest styles into users’ recommended content, influencing people quickly.

In an unscientific online Instagram survey of 17 East San Jose high school students, quoted in this story, most criticized the damage microtrend culture has spurred. These short-lived crazes are expensive to keep up with and the clothes eventually end up in landfills.

“I don’t like microtrends,” said Grace Cruz, age 15. “They can lead to bullying and promote overconsumption.”

Andrey Larin, 15, said microtrends “can help people find their identity but also promote the idea of buying and throwing away.”

Fashion trends used to last entire seasons or even years. Microtrends have reduced the fashion cycles into months or even weeks. These trends seem to revolve around specific styles or “aesthetics,” like “coquette,” “pilates princess” and “tomato girl.” These styles often have specific pieces that are considered to “make the outfit,” like bandanas, chunky bags and bucket hats.

Evania Tran, an incoming sophomore at Evergreen Valley High School, said she thinks microtrends spark competition between people trying to be unique and start new trends rapidly.

Anh Tran, 16, said microtrends are a “waste of money, yet good for business.”

Paulina, 23, who was interviewed at Westfield Oakridge Mall but gave only a first name, said she doesn’t follow microtrends.

“Every two years I feel like I want to get rid of or stop wearing certain things,” she said.

But there are devoted microtrend supporters.

“I think they’re super fun,” said Sasha, 23, who also did not give a last name. “It’s super fun keeping up with them.”

Sasha said that in the past year he has bought 20 or more shirts, five to six pairs of pants and three pairs of shoes. But he also said he usually wears older clothes from his wardrobe.

Content creators such as @lottielashley and @heidiunhinged on Instagram promote awareness around fast fashion and overconsumption.

Others post videos like “What I Will Not be Buying in 2026” or “Fashion Trends I Will Not be Participating In.”

In a similar video from Instagram user @clairexplains, content creator Claire Beluga said, “we are being robbed.” She goes on to say, “Price is going up; quality going down,” which is a popular opinion among many.

Those pushing back on microtrends urge their peers to think for themselves.

“Express yourself,” said Paulina, “Wear whatever you want and don’t care about what other people say. Wear whatever’s comfortable and matches your style.”

San Jose resident Jessica, who did not give a last name, said, “Following trends is fine obviously, but more important is just looking at what you want to wear. Follow your own sense of style.”

Quinn Rickett is a member of the class of 2029 at Silver Creek High School in San Jose.

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