FACES Magazin
  • Home
  • Fashion
    • Fashion Editorials
  • Beauty
  • Living
    • Events
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Eat & Drink
  • Competitions
  • FACES
    • Subscribe to FACES magazine
    • FACES Card
    • Newsletter
    • Jobs
    • ADVERTISING & COOPERATION
    • Imprint
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fashion
    • Fashion Editorials
  • Beauty
  • Living
    • Events
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Eat & Drink
  • Competitions
  • FACES
    • Subscribe to FACES magazine
    • FACES Card
    • Newsletter
    • Jobs
    • ADVERTISING & COOPERATION
    • Imprint
No Result
View All Result
FACES Magazin
No Result
View All Result
Home Culture

90ies-Wiki Vol. 27: Clack bracelets

by Marina Warth
19.08.2020
in Culture
90ies-Wiki Vol. 27: Clack bracelets

When the Wall fell, popular culture rose to a new level of social relevance. Wind of Change? More like a tsunami! The Nineties wash up a tidal wave of catchy tunes and cult movies,
TV series and show stars about the increasingly globalized media landscape. FACES rolls up the decade – and publishes an encyclopedia on the age of grunge, girl groups, GZSZ and clack bracelets in loose succession.

In principle, this is a great invention: bang on! No fiddling with the twist lock, no one-handed hooking. If only the bracelets weren’t such a serious style crime…

“Slap Bracelet” is the original name of the steel slats encased in colorful plastic or nylon, invented by a teacher in the US state of Wisconsin, which adorn the limbs of adolescents for a few months – or disfigure them, depending on how you feel. However, anyone who invests their fortune in the long-term survival of these things on their arm will soon be poor. It’s a brief but intense obsession, with some children slapping them around their wrists so often that the sharp metal penetrates and causes cuts. Bans at some US schools are the result. And if the ugliness that has become an accessory still appears today, for example as a reflector on joggers’ legs, then it is more for pragmatic than aesthetic reasons.

Tags: Cult,
Marina Warth

Marina Warth

Marina Warth ist Stv. Chefredakteurin des FACES Magazins. Zwölf Jahre FACES hat unsere Stv. Chefredakteurin bereits auf dem Buckel. Eine lange Zeit, in der sich ihre Obsession von Chanel-Taschen auf Designermöbel und Vintage-Finds verlagert hat. Geblieben ist über all die Jahre die Liebe zum geschriebenen Wort, zur Farbe Schwarz und zu Abenteuern mit Adrenalin-Garantie.

VERWANDTE ARTIKEL

Stephen Shames: A Lifetime in Photography
Culture

Stephen Shames: A Lifetime in Photography

A portrait of pop icon Lady Gaga
Culture

A portrait of pop icon Lady Gaga

Interview with artist Dënalisa Shijaku
Culture

Interview with artist Dënalisa Shijaku

The Faces in March 2026
Culture

The Faces in March 2026

Load More

POST GALLERY

Black Street StyleBlack Street Style

FACES FASHION EDITORIALS

THE BREWERY by BRIGITTE AESCHBACH

KEYWORD SEARCH

Bags (15) Balenciaga (18) Beauty (18) Berlin (18) Bottega Veneta (20) Calvin Klein (16) Cartier (23) Chanel (56) COS (14) Dior (47) Dolce & Gabbana (16) Dries van Noten (16) Editorial (41) Emporio Armani (14) Etro (15) Falcon (32) Fall/Winter 2026/27 (27) Fall/ Winter 2026/27 (26) Fashion (98) Fashion Week (23) Fendi (21) Ferragamo (23) Gucci (57) Hermès (16) homepage (46) Interview (63) Isabel Marant (19) Jimmy Choo (14) Louis Vuitton (48) Max Mara (30) Miu Miu (22) Omega (15) Photography (20) Prada (35) Saint Laurent (22) Shortcuts (15) Sportmax (19) Street Style (16) Swarovski (20) Travel (22) Versace (23) Watches (28) Wolford (17) Zara (14) Zurich (34)
  • contact
  • Imprint
  • Terms of use
  • FACES Card
  • ADVERTISING & COOPERATION

© 2025 FACES MEDIA GROUP

endede-atde-ch
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fashion
    • Fashion Editorials
  • Beauty
  • Living
    • Events
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Eat & Drink
  • Competitions
  • FACES
    • Subscribe to FACES magazine
    • FACES Card
    • Newsletter
    • Jobs
    • ADVERTISING & COOPERATION
    • Imprint

© 2025 FACES MEDIA GROUP