![]() YouTuber Jenna Marbles called it a mix between “Harajuku, emo, and Igari makeup, the hangover makeup in Japan.” Think Harley Quinn with rudimentary film-editing skills. The style is heavily influenced by Asian culture, specifically anime and K-pop. Tumblr, the dinosaur medium used by emo-girls of yore (2010s), also makes up a big part of the e-girl online diet. As the antecedent “e” would imply, the e-girl is also “very online” - maybe she’s a gamer, a cosplayer, or spends a lot of time on TikTok. The prototypical e-girl is really more of an idea - an aesthetic rather than a person. And now, it’s the age of the e-girl, who stamps black hearts on her cheekbones, listens to K-pop, and dresses like she’s auditioning for a reboot of The Craft. In the 2000s, it was the angsty, pop-punk emo girls who listened to My Chemical Romance and took Facebook photos like this. In the ’80s, they were called goths, loved the Cure, and dressed in all black, with black hair, and intentionally pale skin. Think back to the British punks, in tartan and T-shirts destroyed by safety pins. ![]() ![]() Since the mid-20th century, each generation has had their own version of what is now known as an e-girl. ![]()
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