From the moment Nirvana's breakout single "Smells Like Teen Spirit" took over MTV—with Cobain wearing two second-hand T-shirts one over the other, his unkempt hair hanging down his face—a style was born that has never really died
The oversized cardigans, those bug-eye shades, the ripped jeans and flannel shirts—30 years on from his death, Kurt Cobain's style lives on as much as his music.
It may have disturbed the anti-corporate icon to see how his thrift-store outfits have been repurposed into ultra-expensive garments.
But from the moment Nirvana's breakout single "Smells Like Teen Spirit" took over MTV—with Cobain wearing two second-hand T-shirts one over the other, his unkempt hair hanging down his face—a style was born that has never really died.
"He grew up in poverty and doubled up his clothes to mask how thin he was, which he was always self-conscious about, despite being a good-looking guy," said Charlotte Blum, author of a book on grunge culture.