You might think that personalized skirts, thin glasses, bright shirts, and loafers are the boring items you need for a typical office job. Gen Z, nevertheless, has pivoted these basic parts to tap into a new trend known as “business sleaze.”
Standard items have been given a beautiful makeover in the most recent visual, making use of shortening skirts, buttoning shirts, and adding pairs of pure knee-high socks, making them a popular TikTok pattern.
A relative of “indie sleaze”, which was common from around 2008 to 2014, business slime grew from 2023 fashion shows that saw designers add aspect to the “quiet luxury” tendency by giving minimalist pieces a more figure-hugging silhouette, resulting in a look dubbed the “office siren”. Business slime resulted from the integration of these two style.
Bella Hadid, a style model, was a first to adopt the type, with her two most notable looks including a slim-fit set blazer and a micro-mini dark skirt suit with system Gucci loafers.
She finished both outfits with thin wire-framed glasses and normal makeup.
The search has also been seen on Kate Moss and Jennifer Lawrence, a movie star.
TikTok users are going one step further by styling buttoned-up tops with large pants for a more modern top. They do so by wearing buttoned-up tops with relationships.
Due to how inexpensive and easy it is to make, this appearance is quickly becoming popular. The majority of people already have the essentials in their clothes, and anything that is n’t can be easily purchased from second-hand shops or resale programs.
Blazers in lighter, cinched silhouettes are a mainstay of the look, and “low-rise, boot-cut or sleek, tailored trousers even emerge alongside pencil skirts and are styled with shirts or more everyday jersey tops”, says Sofia Martellini, the womenswear top strategist at trend forecaster WGSN.
The trend’s colour palette is unsurprisingly muted and avoids anything vibrant or patterned, Martellini says.
“The colour card is very neutral-based, with grey, black, white and brown being the most prominent to evoke the ‘office’ feeling.”
The tight fit and shorter hemlines maintain a feminine appearance despite these shades’ potential to be dull.
Why has corporate sleaze appealed to Gen Z, especially those who have not yet entered the workforce, with remote working becoming the norm and dress codes becoming ever more casual in real office settings?
“A lot of the current trends we see, especially for younger generations, are caused especially by sentiments of nostalgia and anemoia – nostalgia for a time you haven’t lived through”, Martellini says.
Rachel Green in Friends and The Devil Wears Prada characters are frequently mentioned in inspiration posts on social media as exemplifying the look.
They are wearable fashion, not something super conceptual, that people have easy and constant access to, Martellini claims. “They are visual representations of the fashion of the time.”
Millennials will recall the days when business casual was accepted for everything, from the morning commute to after-work drinks. Prior to the pandemic, dressing up for an office event affected your decision about whether you went out after work.
Gen Z looking to recreate this lifestyle’s style, even through their viral bayonetta glasses, is now the perfect reference for these 1990s and 2000s television and film collections.
Gen Z and younger millennials are redefining dress codes for the workplace in many ways. This trend, for younger fashion enthusiasts, is less about obstructing the office environment and more about upholding what was once a strict dress code.
Will this modernized version of workwear actually be seen in the workplace? According to Martellini, corporate sleaze will become more prevalent among young professionals.
“While not every Gen Z will dress sexy for the workplace, generally speaking they are subverting office-wear codes and bringing more relaxed, less strict silhouettes and outfits.”