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Hipster Girls on Newbury

They squirm inside their clothes tweed, chiffon tiered skirts, and bows of their grandmothers’ sepia, halcyon days with lumberjack flannel and Kerouac quotes, but it’s more a matter of age than size, these charging, listless, candid creatures with hairstyles that can only be described as gravity readily defied and self-cut, frequently dyed to shades that swing between black coffee and New York poetry deep imagism and social realism against the backdrop of American Apparel ads on scratched up Macs. They slouch up and down trafficked Newbury, dropping names like Morrissey and Bukowski pausing now and then to pick up on the ennui of twenty-three, and how they will one day live la vie Dharhimian, running on American Spirits, James Dean, Truffaut chic, a monthly check from their parents, an apathetic sneer at holding anything too dearly and how they hate that word—hip-ster.
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Written by
liz-2
American
Published
Dec 30, 2012
Lines·Words
27·142
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