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Entertainment

9 School Trends That Made You The Cool Kid In The ’80s

By Matthias Binder May 18, 2026
9 School Trends That Made You The Cool Kid In The '80s
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There was a very specific social currency in the hallways of an ’80s school, and it had little to do with grades. What you wore, what you carried, and what you stuck on your binder determined where you stood in the lunchroom hierarchy. Some of it was fashion. Some of it was clever marketing. All of it felt absolutely essential at the time.

Contents
1. The Trapper Keeper2. Jelly Shoes3. Neon Everything4. The Popped Collar5. High-Top Sneakers6. Friendship Pins and Bracelets7. Acid-Wash Denim8. Leg Warmers9. The Swatch Watch

Looking back now, the decade’s school trends were a wonderfully chaotic mix of athletic wear crossing over into everyday clothes, plastic shoes that blistered your feet, and accessories that somehow communicated your entire personality. Here are the nine trends that separated the cool kids from everyone else.

1. The Trapper Keeper

1. The Trapper Keeper (Image Credits: Pexels)
1. The Trapper Keeper (Image Credits: Pexels)

Every kid in the ’80s knew that showing up with a Trapper Keeper was a surefire way to start the school year off right. These colorful, Velcro-fastened binders with bold graphics were more than just a way to keep your notes together – they were a declaration of coolness. Before smartphones or social media, your school supplies were your personality. Trapper Keepers came in bright colors, usually covered in vivid scenes that looked like they’d been airbrushed onto a rainbow. The sound of the Velcro ripping open in the middle of class is a noise every adult who grew up in the 1980s knows by heart.

Trapper Keepers were our backpacks’ best friends in the 1980s. These binder-folder combinations were perfect for keeping track of assignments and handouts from class, and the fun pictures and prints on the outside were the biggest draw of all. Known for their vibrant designs and organizational prowess, they remain popular among students and collectors today. The binder’s iconic Velcro closure and handy pockets provide both function and flair, keeping papers neatly organized.

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2. Jelly Shoes

2. Jelly Shoes (Image Credits: Unsplash)
2. Jelly Shoes (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Jelly shoes, with their translucent plastic material, were a staple of 1980s summer fashion. Available in a rainbow of colors, they were both fun and practical. These shoes were adored for their lightweight feel and beach-friendly nature. They were affordable, allowing kids and adults alike to have multiple pairs in different shades.

Jelly shoes were a plastic paradise. Girls loved them, and parents loved how cheap they were. These translucent rubber shoes came in glitter-filled versions, neon pinks, and even glow-in-the-dark styles. The jelly shoes trend wasn’t just popular – it was everywhere. If you’re wondering what girls wore on their feet in the ’80s, the answer often included jellies in at least five colors. The fact that they gave you blisters by recess was beside the point.

3. Neon Everything

3. Neon Everything (Image Credits: Unsplash)
3. Neon Everything (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Neon colors dominated ’80s fashion like no other decade before or since. The neon fad is one of the things that images of ’80s fashion immediately bring to mind. There were bright, neon colors everywhere – on clothes, in accessories. Teenagers loved wearing neon pink, green, yellow, and orange – often in some combination of two, three, or all four at once. Neon wasn’t strict about clothes; it was also found in makeup, footwear, and hairstyles.

When high school students think back on this era, they recall nylon parachute pants in the brighter the better hues, alligator shirts with the collars up, and Nike tennis shoes with thick neon colored laces paired with stonewashed jeans rolled up and pegged above the ankle. Girls wore minidresses with puffy shoulders, big teased hair, and plastic earrings. Always neon, neon, neon.

4. The Popped Collar

4. The Popped Collar (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
4. The Popped Collar (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

Inspired by movies like The Breakfast Club, khakis, polo shirts with popped collars, and loafers were staples of the preppy crowd. Flipping that collar up was a subtle but unmistakable signal that you had figured something out about the world that other kids hadn’t quite caught onto yet. The preppy style in ’80s fashion included collared shirts, sweaters tied around the shoulders, and pleated skirts. It was clean, polished, and more refined compared to other styles of the decade.

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In countless ’80s movies, the guy with the popped collar tends to be the popular kid at school. It’s hard to say exactly why that stereotype formed around the look, but it stuck. Popular ’80s teen clothing brands included Members Only, Guess, Calvin Klein, Esprit, and The Limited – and wearing any of them with a flipped-up collar essentially completed the uniform of the decade’s cool crowd.

5. High-Top Sneakers

5. High-Top Sneakers (Image Credits: Unsplash)
5. High-Top Sneakers (Image Credits: Unsplash)

High-top sneakers were essential footwear for teens, with brands like Nike, Reebok, and Converse leading the market. These shoes were often worn with thick, colorful socks pulled up high, and laces were sometimes replaced with alternative materials like ribbon or colorful shoelaces that matched the outfit’s color scheme.

Oversized sweatshirts with big logos were popular among teenagers, especially from sporty brands like Nike and Adidas. These articles were no longer solely for working out; they became a symbol of cool casual. Sneakers, especially of the high-top variety, were more than sportswear. Launched in 1984, after Jordan won a Gold Medal at the Olympics, Jordan signed a five-year, multi-million dollar contract with Nike that led to one of the most iconic and sought-after shoe brands in footwear history. Owning the right pair of high-tops at the right moment was practically a personality trait.

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6. Friendship Pins and Bracelets

6. Friendship Pins and Bracelets (Flickr, CC BY 2.0)
6. Friendship Pins and Bracelets (Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

Sticker albums, Trapper Keepers, and friendship pins were exchanged with abandon on the playground. There was an unspoken social economy of who had the most jelly bracelets. Friendship pins were a heartfelt token of friendship in the 1980s. Made from safety pins and colorful beads, they adorned shoelaces and backpacks. These pins were more than accessories; they were symbols of connection and affection. Creating and exchanging them became a cherished ritual among friends.

Braiding friendship bracelets out of colorful threads wasn’t just a way to pass time in class – it was a sign of who your best friends forever were. These simple bracelets, often exchanged as tokens of friendship, could take hours to make and were worn until they frayed off. Today, friendship bracelets are still a sweet gesture, though they’re often made with beads or more sophisticated designs. The handmade quality was always a large part of their appeal.

7. Acid-Wash Denim

7. Acid-Wash Denim (Image Credits: Pexels)
7. Acid-Wash Denim (Image Credits: Pexels)

Denim on denim – a combination of denim pants or skirts and a denim shirt or jacket – became a huge fashion trend in the ’80s, and kids were not left out of that frenzy. When it came to authentic ’80s fashion for kids, one trend undeniably stood out: acid-wash denim. The integration of comfort into the vintage aesthetic could be seen through items such as relaxed-fit denim pants and jackets. These pieces tapped into the iconic acid-wash and distressed styles reminiscent of the ’80s while offering a comfortable fit.

Denim jackets in the ’80s were worn oversized and often decorated with patches, pins, or bleach treatments. Teens would layer these jackets over everything from band t-shirts to formal dresses, creating the perfect blend of casual and rebellious style that defined the decade’s aesthetic. Denim held a powerful place in ’80s school fashion. Boys had denim jackets that were patched or plain blue. These jackets were tough enough to be worn on the playground and cool enough to wear in the classroom.

8. Leg Warmers

8. Leg Warmers (David Jones, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)
8. Leg Warmers (David Jones, Flickr, CC BY 2.0)

Blame it on the aerobic craze and movies like Flashdance and Fame. Athletic wear crossed over into everyday fashion, and comfort never looked so good. Leg warmers, initially designed to keep dancers’ muscles warm, quickly became a fashion must-have. Worn over leggings, jeans, or even bare legs, they added a touch of casual cool.

Leg warmers were commonly worn in the 1980s. Bright neon leg warmers over tights, paired with a leotard, probably conjure up images of workout videos. But you didn’t have to be working out to wear these fun, fashionable items. The aerobics fashion influence on teenage style cannot be overstated during the ’80s. Spandex leggings became acceptable streetwear, often worn with oversized t-shirts or sweatshirts that contrasted with the form-fitting lower half. This athletic-inspired look reflected the decade’s fitness obsession and desire for comfortable, movement-friendly clothing.

9. The Swatch Watch

9. The Swatch Watch (Image Credits: Unsplash)
9. The Swatch Watch (Image Credits: Unsplash)

If you didn’t have Rolex money in the 1980s and you wanted something more bright and fun, Swatches were the way to go. These colorful, funky watches were elite. Large plastic jewelry, bangles, hoop earrings, fanny packs, Ray-Ban Wayfarers, and Swatch watches were all part of the signature accessory lineup of the era. The Swatch wasn’t just for telling time – stacking two or three of them on one wrist was the move.

Digital watches were all the rage in the ’80s, and they’re making a comeback in schoolyards across the country. The Swatch, launched in 1983 by Swiss company Swatch Group, brought colorful, affordable watches to the mass market at a time when accessories were treated as bold, interchangeable statements rather than understated additions. The real secret of the ’80s accessories was the freedom they offered in mix-and-matching. A Swatch in neon orange paired with a jelly bracelet and friendship pin on the other wrist was the full package – a look that told everyone in homeroom exactly who you were.

What’s striking, looking back, is how physical and tactile all of it was. Status came from what you could hold, wear, trade, or show off in person. Back in the 1980s, school shopping was a ritual that went beyond just grabbing pencils and paper. Walking into a store meant being greeted by bright colors, bold designs, and items that were as much about personality as practicality. That particular kind of self-expression – loud, colorful, and completely unironic – remains one of the most recognizable signatures of the decade.

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