With the arrival of Netflix’s ‘jeen-yuhs’ documentary about Kanye West, we decided to take a look
back at his style evoution from ‘College Dropout’ to now.
It seems that with the release of every new Kanye West album, a new era of his personal style is also
born. It’s crazy to think that nearly 20 years after he dropped his debut album, The College
Dropout, Kanye is still defining today’s fashion zeitgeist. Admit it, you definitely picked up a pair of
shutter shades back in the late Aughts after you saw Yeezy wearing a pair of them. And don’t even
act like you never wanted to wear that Givenchy Rottweiler T-shirt he wore during the Watch The
Throne tour or his iconic The Life of Pablo merch. Whether it’s Polo Bear sweaters, Maison
Margiela face masks, Yeezy Adidas sneakers, or industrial Red Wing boots mixed with Yeezy Gap
Round Jackets, Kanye’s style has never stopped evolving. And his eclectic tastes for high fashion
and streetwear has led to major collaborations with Adidas, Nike, Louis Vuitton, and now Gap.
Even as emerging rappers become this generation’s new style icons, Kanye’s influence on how
people dress doesn’t go away.
To celebrate the release of Netflix’s three-part documentary, jeen-yuhs, we tracked the evolution of Kanye West’s style—from his preppy College Dropout fits to the avant-garde pieces he wore throughout the Yeezy era.
‘The College Dropout’
Key Pieces: Rugby polos with a popped collar, blazers, Louis Vuitton backpack, Polo bear sweaters
Kanye West knew from the start that his style would play a huge part in his persona. And with a debut album titled The College Dropout, he dressed accordingly. Kanye presented himself as a preppy-leaning backpack rapper with a penchant for Polo, which was greatly influenced by Chicago’s Reggieknow, a well-dressed Lo-head and illustrator graffiti who threw Dam Dare parties and dressed unlike most of his peers at the time. Kanye wore popped collars, bright colors, pink polos, corduroy blazers, rare sneakers, and an actual Louis Vuitton backpack. Polo has always been a staple within Black culture, and the backpack rapper look wasn’t an entirely new concept, but Kanye’s preppy style was different from how his peers dressed in the early 2000s (oversized T-shirts, baggy jeans, matching denim sets). And it resonated with fans, who not only embraced his music but his style, too.—Aria Hughes