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Researchers have, for the first time, used mathematical analysis to confirm the so-called “20-year rule”—the idea that fashion trends tend to come full circle roughly every two decades.
On April 7, a team from the Santa Fe Institute, Northwestern University and Princeton University said they analyzed more than 150 years of women’s clothing data—from the late 19th century to the present—and found that certain styles tend to resurface about every 20 years.
The researchers merged sewing pattern records from the University of Rhode Island’s Commercial Pattern Archive with runway collection materials to create a dataset of roughly 37,000 images of women’s garments spanning 1869 to 2025. They quantified design features—waistline height, pant-leg width and skirt length—and tracked how those elements evolved over time.
The analysis found that fashion oscillates between novelty and tradition. As a look becomes mainstream, designers tweak familiar elements to stand out, and those reinventions often revive past styles and send them back into vogue.
Emma Zaidella of the Santa Fe Institute, who led the study, said, “This is the first time anyone has systematically compiled and precisely analyzed over a century of fashion data. The repetition of trends is no longer just a hypothesis—the data confirms it.”
Online communities echo the same idea. Many users point out that 1990s–2000s fashion borrowed from the 1960s–70s, the 2010s reinterpreted 1980s styles, and today’s looks are once again recycling older trends—just with fresh twists.











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