时间:2025-10-08 06:03:19 来源:网络整理编辑:熱點
"Run, don't walk to Starbucks! Obscure Harry-coded cups and mugs," reads a recent TikTok video poste
"Run, don't walk to Starbucks! Obscure Harry-coded cups and mugs," reads a recent TikTok video posted by @elizatolfreythat's garnered over 1.4 million views. The video then pans to mugs and thermoses decorated with images of breakfast food, and if you're struggling to put the pieces together, that's the point. Far from the mass-produced concert tee or branded figurine, "subtle merch" or your fave "coded" items are deeply personal to fans, often homemade, and signal a fan's knowledge or insider status within a given fandom. In this case, it's a familiarity with the lyrics of Styles' song "Keep Driving," in which he sings, "maple syrup, coffee, pancakes for two, hash brown, egg yolk, I will always love you."
You have to be deep in the world of Styles to feel that these cups have anything to do with him — and you. But new must-have subtle merch videos like @elizatolfrey's pop up daily, and they're part of the changing conversation of what it means to be a fan.
SEE ALSO:'Harry's House' album leaks are a lesson in fandom politicsDr. Briony Hannell, a university teacher of Sociology at the University of Sheffield who researches fan culture, explained to Mashable that fan-made merch can signal a wide range of information to other fans, such as knowledge and interests within the fandom. Further, creating merch fosters a deeply emotional relationship between fans and "their object of fandom"; it's a way to represent the relationship a fan feels they have with their fave. "When a fan makes subtle fan-made merchandise and gifts or sells it to other fans, they are able to pass on this personal, emotional, and embodied relationship," said Hannell. "It can draw the dividing line between hardcore fans, fans, casual audience members, non-fans, and anti-fans."
Think of it as like speaking a special language shared only among those who know: If someone recognizes a fan's subtle merch, they immediately know they're part of the club.
In her essay "Fan Labor and Feminism: Capitalizing on the Fannish Labor of Love,"fandom researcher Kristina Busse wrote that fannish love injects these otherwise standard items with meaning that gives them worth.
Madison Seifer has been a fan of Styles for 12 years but didn't discover fan-made subtle merch until 2020, when she stumbled across the multi-fandom merch store Pressed Paper Shop on TikTok. The 23-year-old clinical research assistant isn't a super showy person and appreciates that she can wear subtle merch with everyday outfits "without it being in your face." Among her collection are "shirts that are replicas of shirts he has worn, sweaters with lyrics on them, a decal on my car of two ghosts in reference to his song on Harry Styles, and earrings from All by Lauren[a popular online small business that sells earrings inspired by the shop-runner's favorite singers] that are inspired by his songs or outfits," Seifer told Mashable. She finds fan-made merch on Etsy, Instagram, and TikTok.
It's not just Styles fans that partake in subtle merch. Fan-made merch, which relies on a fan's personal connection to the object of fandom, therefore making it more subtle, is key to any fandom, from Marvel to anime.
Megan Tan, a 21-year-old K-pop fan and art student in Singapore, runs Tarocoeur, a K-pop online store that she promotes on Instagram and TikTok as well as hosting local pop-ups. Her signature items are liquid- and glitter-filled Pantone swatch keychains reminiscent of '90s glitter wands. She has swatches for over 20 different K-pop groups, and she also takes requests for video game and anime swatches. Each keychain features the name of the song, artist, or character it's an homage to. "I take inspiration from music video lore, album concepts, song lyrics, etc. and interpret them using colors, textures, and vibes to capture the essence of the song, artist, or character I’m working on," Tan explained to Mashable. "I get comments on my videos that say things along the lines of 'idk how but that just looks so [group name]' and that’s exactly what I aim for when I design."
"Not everyone likes carrying their favorite K-pop boy around, Victorian locket–style."
Growing up, the only place where Tan could buy merch was the bootleg anime and idol goods store at the mall that only had the most "soulless and tacky" items. "I just felt like I didn’t need the whole world to know who I was a fan of, so I always looked out for merch that was a little more low-key, and eventually made my own," said Tan. "Official merch usually consists of logos and faces slapped onto various mass-produced items, and not everyone likes carrying their favorite K-pop boy around, Victorian locket–style."
Hannell noted that official merch clearly indicates the object of fandom and serves as an advertisement for it, with the object's name or face central to the design. Official merch is what fandom scholars call "affirmational fandom" — public, centralized, and sanctioned displays of fandom that take a literal interpretation of the object of fandom. Subtle merch, like fan fiction, is "transformational fandom" and only recognizable as merch by other fans with a similar level of knowledge and engagement in the fandom. Transformational fandom is anonymous, un-sanctioned, and decentralized. It's where fans get creative with their interpretations, and where community is built.
That's not to say that some artists don't excel at selling fan-oriented official merch that's more in line with subtle merch. Seifer pointed to Taylor Swift's Folklore cardigan as an example. The beige cardigan mass-produced by Swift's team doesn't say Swift's name anywhere and is decorated with silver stars and a patch that reads, "The Folklore Album" in small print. The cardigan quickly became a sought-after item on SwiftTok, the side of TikTok where Swifties gather. This is because the Folklore cardigan operates like any successful piece of subtle merch: Those who know are "in the know" and recognize the nondescript sweater, which gives the wearer status within the Swiftie community.
In "Fans and Merchandise,"media researcher Avi Santo wrote that official merch is a way that media industries have tried to define fandom solely through consumerist terms. It's an attempt to make fandom a lifestyle that fans pay corporations to have, rather than something that's more organic and community-based. He argued that fan-made merch is a reaction to industries trying to control what merch is sold. He also asserted that to a fan, merch can represent anything tangentially related to the object of their fandom and can materially represent experiences and memories. He wrote, "fans give their consumption an inherently private and personal nature that removes the object of consumption from the logic of capitalist exchange."
Fans argue that fan-made merch and the meaning it carries can't be replicated by the object of fandom's teams or outsiders trying to capitalize on a fandom's popularity. "You have to enjoy the music or else you wouldn't have fun creating these designs and it just wouldn't be authentic," Joanna Li, a 19-year-old student at Fordham University who sells BTS and BLACKPINK–inspired phone cases and sweatshirts, told Mashable.
As social media becomes more and more about self-branding, fandom has become a lifestyle, with creators who brand themselves as fans posting like any other lifestyle creator would — except the products they're accumulating and advertising are all related to their fave. In 2017 Santo cautioned against this. He wrote, "Fandom as lifestyle doesn’t merely place greater emphasis on consumption, but on individuals using branded products as forms of self-expression and even self-promotion in order to establish their value in a reputational economy." He goes on to say that objects, like fan-made merch, are no longer used for curation, but rather are "self-branding" opportunities. And nowhere is the culture of self-branding more insidious than on TikTok.
"Subtle merch is linked to central tensions within fan culture around who is perceived as a "good" or "real" fan and who is not — divisions that are often drawn along the lines of gender, race, sexuality, age, and class," explained Hannell. And with the new wave of fandom on TikTok and the coinciding rise of the influencer fan, these questions are at the forefront of any fan's mind. Subtle merch, a fandom practice based in community and love for a fan's fave, is itself at risk of becoming a way to commodify your fandom for likes and views — which wouldn't be very subtle at all.
TopicsTikTokFandom
Darth Vader is back. Why do we still care?2025-10-08 05:09
再度搭檔劉昊然,王寶強新片,《少林寺之得寶傳奇》定檔大年初一2025-10-08 04:52
佘詩曼曬與唐嫣合照,倆人貼頭摟肩姐妹情深,唐嫣“紙片腰”太搶鏡2025-10-08 04:29
開年首部懸疑片就這?我替張震瘦下來的24斤肉感到難過2025-10-08 04:28
The five guys who climbed Australia's highest mountain, in swimwear2025-10-08 04:27
楊冪新片畫麵太炸!雷佳音變身紅甲武士,手持戰斧刺殺小說家2025-10-08 04:27
《這個殺手不太冷靜》常遠和馬麗的番外放出 ,諷刺娛樂圈多種亂象2025-10-08 04:22
首映票房近2億 ,海信蒸燙洗衣機邀您一起來看《溫暖的抱抱》2025-10-08 03:34
'The Flying Bum' aircraft crashes during second test flight2025-10-08 03:25
4部主旋律大片定檔7月上映,王俊凱 、王源 、易烊千璽隔空對戰2025-10-08 03:17
Honda's all2025-10-08 05:46
風格清新而又甜美,其溫文爾雅的形象更是廣受追捧,肖香蘭東莞博越影視簽約模特2025-10-08 05:44
王婷燕 ,東莞博越影視簽約模特風格清新而又甜美2025-10-08 05:33
《沉默的真相》宣布定檔9月16 日 廖凡搭檔白宇開啟熱血正義之路2025-10-08 04:38
Here's what 'Game of Thrones' actors get up to between takes2025-10-08 04:29
《蜘蛛俠 :英雄無歸》破13.8億美元 ,3月上線流媒體 ,內地未定檔2025-10-08 04:01
2021第五屆青年電影時尚之夜點亮魔都2025-10-08 03:59
某音蹭易烊千璽電影小紅花的熱度,不但沒有令人反感,反而很開心2025-10-08 03:57
You can now play 'Solitaire' and 'Tic2025-10-08 03:53
佘詩曼曬與唐嫣合照 ,倆人貼頭摟肩姐妹情深 ,唐嫣“紙片腰”太搶鏡2025-10-08 03:25