Aesthetics Wiki
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This page is a list of questions frequently asked about Aesthetics Wiki and aesthetics generally. If you have a question that is not included here, please contact a moderator or post your question to our community blog.

Questions about aesthetics

What is an aesthetic? Why does everyone always argue about what aesthetics should be on this wiki?

The short answer: A collection of visual schema that creates a "mood."

Some types of aesthetics include:

  • Aesthetics originated from Internet communities (Ex: Cottagecore, Dark Academia)
  • National cultures (Americana, Traditional Polish) Note: Most articles that try to describe a national culture will be deleted. These articles should have a higher quality and risk stereotyping a nation.
  • Genres of fiction with established visual tropes (Ex: Cyberpunk, Gothic)
  • Holidays with iconic imagery and colors (Ex: Christmas, Halloween)
  • Locations that have expected activities, components, and types of people (Ex: Fanfare, Urbancore)
  • Music genres with consistent visual motifs present in cover art, music videos, etc (Ex: City Pop, Emo)
    • This does not mean all music genres should be present. For example, Pop and Alternative bands' do not have shared visual traits.
  • Periods of history with distinct visuals (Ex: Victorian, Y2K)
  • Stereotypes (Ex: Brocore, VSCO)
  • Subcultures that share music genres and fashion styles (Ex: Raver, Skinheads)


The long answer:

The word "aesthetic" originated as the philosophical discussion about what beauty is, how we should approach it, and why it exists. However, Millennials and Generation Z started using that term as an adjective that describes what they personally consider beautiful. For example: "After Denise finished watching The Virgin Suicides, she said, 'Wow. That was so aesthetic.'"

Aesthetics have now come to mean a collection of images, colors, objects, music, and writings that creates a specific emotion, purpose, and community. It is largely dependent on personal taste, cultural background, and exposure to different pieces of media. This definition is not official and can be debated. There is currently no dictionary definition that captures the complexity of this phenomenon, which arose in the Internet youth. Rather, people who participate in the community "know it when they see it." These elements are constantly debated, as the opinion on whether or not some aesthetics exist or are valid is constantly debated. This is especially true since everyone's own personal life factors into their opinions.

Here is an example of a debate that is going on within the community. Whether or not Lolita is an aesthetic varies on what counts as visual elements. On one hand, lace, petticoats, and bows are valid elements of visual schema. Those elements combine to spark feelings of kawaii, de-sexualization, rebellion, and appreciation of antique. On the other hand, aesthetics are made up of elements other than fashion, such as home decor or music. Fashion is the visual element, rather than the components making up the coord/outfit. That element is part of broader schemas such as Goth and Victorian. What counts as an element and what qualifies as sparking an emotion is a complicated subject.

So right now, the subject is trying to be defined by the community. What either fits into a larger schema or is distinct enough to warrant its own aesthetic is difficult to say and would depend on who you are asking.

Using aesthetics

How do I find my aesthetic?

See Helping You Find Your Aesthetic or ask on the Discord server.


Can I have multiple aesthetics?

Yes. As aesthetics are largely subjective and individual, there is no right or wrong way to have an aesthetic. You are free to like multiple aesthetics and can keep them separate, mix and match, or change aesthetics as you grow older and develop personally. You can see Blending: Comparable & Contrasting Aesthetics to see the different ways in which you can blend the aesthetics in a pleasing way.


My personality and interests are different from others within the aesthetic community. Should I still have the aesthetic?

The answer to this question varies by respondent.

In our opinion as moderators, however, it is completely acceptable to have qualities that do not typically match the others' in the community. You can exclude any of the things that do not align with your interests and can blend with an aesthetic that does or keep it completely separate. Trying to conform to a clique would only cause negative feelings and suppress yourself. However, lifestyle-oriented aesthetics such as Cottagecore often center around activities that match a way of life, so it is also a possibility that you only appreciate the aesthetic on others rather than yourself, or that you should impose visual qualities such as materials and textures, prints, and decor on your personal hobbies and daily functions. See Blending: Comparable & Contrasting Aesthetics.

As an example, you can appreciate the Dark Academia aesthetic yet hate studying. You can wear tweed and decorate your room while doing the activities that you actually like. You may be slightly excluded from the community that shares study tips and literary analyses, but you can still enjoy the visual tropes.


Moodboards

What is a moodboard?

A moodboard is one of the most reliable ways to gauge your aesthetic and allows you to be focused when it comes to understanding your color scheme, common motifs, and "vibe." It is a collection of images, either laid out in a grid, edited like a magazine page, or in a collage with transparent images. They are arranged in a manner that looks aesthetically pleasing through understanding Colour Theory, cohesiveness, and Blending: Comparable & Contrasting Aesthetics.


How do I create a moodboard?

Here are some basic steps for creating a moodboard:

  1. Collect images. This is typically done using Pinterest, Tumblr, Google Images, and other image collecting sites. Be sure to use images that have diverse subjects, such as fashion, animals, home decor, models, objects, etc.
  2. Remove the images that do not fit. They might be too similar to a better image, have clashing colors, etc.
  3. Use a photo editor to arrange the images. These include Canva, Adobe Spark, LINE Camera, Crello, etc.


Questions about the Wiki

How can I help this wiki?

You can help this wiki through various ways, including but not limited to:

  • Creating pages of pre-existing aesthetics that are missing from this wiki. Check our "Pages We Need" article for a list of ones we would like to see
  • Fixing grammatical mistakes, re-writing certain sentences for clarity, re-arranging different sections, alphabetizing, and getting rid of broken links.
  • Adding additional information, images, citations, and examples of aesthetics. This is best done for the "Needs Work" category, and should be done for short pages, rather than ones with an already-established media and visuals list, such as in Dark Academia.
  • Discussing aesthetics with other users, showing appreciation, and creating moodboards in the forum.
  • Having fun in the Discord. Engaging with the community does not have to involve knowledge. Memes and asking for help are always encouraged.


Who created this wiki? Where are they now?

The creator of this wiki is FairyPage. However, after a hiatus of half of a year, she deleted over half of the wiki without input from users or the other staff members. After the wiki monitor tried to assess the situation and was subsequently blocked by her, she has been banned from this community permanently. Because she has left the wiki on bad terms, she does not speak for us. It is best to consult the current staff members and participants of the wiki on matters pertaining to it.

What are the proper headings and formatting guidelines? How do I create them?

The Style Guide can be found here, where it details the order in which to place the headings and how what each heading should contain. For how to do these actions, look here.

Why are many old pages deleted/becoming redirects now?

Many pages on the Aesthetics Wiki break the rules, specifically the ones on no single-subject aesthetics and no personal aesthetics. Because of the high volume of content and uncertainty of where to place these rule-breaking pages, the staff members were not able to moderate them previously. With the creation of the List of Deleted Pages and Why, Personal Aesthetics Wiki (not made by the staff of this wiki), as well as the single-subject aesthetics masterlist, the pages are able to stay in a way that maintains the wiki's ability to be an in-depth source of information.

How are the staff chosen?

The team of staff members would choose new staff members if the wiki grows, a moderator or administrator has to leave this post, or if there are more responsibilities to fulfill. The staff discuss the candidate together and then give the chosen contributor the privileges. Staff members look for people who are:

  • Knowledgeable in aesthetics and can speak definitively for an aesthetic community
  • Constantly contributing to the wiki in meaningful ways, such as creating necessary pages with good information
  • Well-mannered and would contribute to meaningful discussions without interpersonal drama

This community used to have a much freer, more welcoming and relaxed tone. What happened?

As the aesthetic phenomenon becomes more popular, the administrators want to demonstrate that aesthetics are a deep and valid movement that has justifiable boundaries between aesthetics.

As such, we are increasing and tightening our requirements for new pages, revising existing pages, reformatting, and discussing unanswered questions.

We welcome beginners and people who want to share aesthetic ideas. However, reading the FAQ, new page standards, and Helping You Find Your Aesthetic pages are necessary to understand this Wiki's standards and the phenomenon.

Larger Wiki communities like Wikipedia and TVTropes have developed reputations as encyclopedic, reliable sources because they are moderated well and rich with citations, details, and examples. We want to achieve the same level of quality so that users can find comprehensive and relevant information regarding aesthetics.


We are a group that wants to interview you for the purposes of news, anthropology, business analysis, etc. Who do we contact?

Contact any of the moderators or administrators via Discord messaging. Also feel free to lurk on the Discord server to see what conversations happen in this community.


Why are controversial aesthetics such as Traumacore and Fashwave on this Wiki? Do the mods promote these ideas?

The Aesthetics Wiki is an impartial source. We are here to provide information only. The moderators are not the arbiters of morality and will acknowledge any aesthetics if they exist. We also include a section describing why the aesthetic is controversial and the risks of being involved in trauma- and politics-based aesthetics. If you are sensitive to these subjects, there are browser extensions that filter out potentially triggering content.

Why was my page deleted?

Your page does not meet the standards that are required for pages on this Wiki. We delete pages for various reasons. Contact a moderator if you do not know why your page was deleted or if you want to appeal the decision.

Our requirements for new pages can be viewed on Creating an Ideal Page.


Why are there so few pages on non-Western cultures? And why was the page I made for that culture deleted?

Cultural pages are under protection because the subject is a sensitive one that needs research, personal experience, and specificity in order to represent it correctly. Because a majority of contributors here are from the Western world, this leads to a deficiency in people with enough knowledge to write on this topic.

Cultures cannot be treated like an internet aesthetic; there are thousands of years of aesthetic shifts; historical, philosophical, and religious contexts; and issues of racial conflict that necessitate cultural pages to be written by expert opinions. One cannot simplify a culture into an "essential essence." Doing so is an example of Orientalism (even if applied to non-Asian cultures), in which an imperial power stereotypes a people and appropriates it without paying proper respect to its people by treating them as a static "other."

If you want to contribute to a cultural page, cite your sources, provide necessary context, and use photographs of that people, rather than media that misrepresents them. For example, if you want to make an article on Native tribes in the Plains, include all of the tribal names, information about their religion, and DO NOT add media examples that are based on racial stereotypes that fueled oppression.


What do the mods mean when they say it's a photo subject, not an aesthetic?

An aesthetic needs at least five different visuals. Simply having photos of a subject, such as an animal, is not an aesthetic. These visuals cannot be parts of a whole (i.e. feathers would not count for a “Birdcore” page). Reproductions of the image on different mediums are also not accepted. For example, “rose printed fabric” is unacceptable for a theoretical “Rosecore” page. It is true that the components of that subject can be applied to something else, such as its color or symbolic meaning, but it is not adequate enough. If you were to remove any explicit mention of the main motif, an aesthetic should still hold up. For example, if you were to delete the word "books" in dark academia, the article could still survive.

The best way to understand this is through the superhero Batman. He wears a bat-inspired costume, has bat-shaped weapons, and uses fear. But there is no such thing as "batcore." If your "aesthetic" follows the same visual application that Batman uses, it is not an aesthetic, but rather a theme.


Can I make a page for my personal aesthetic?

No. The purpose of this wiki is to be a reliable source where people could find information about aesthetics that already exist in the world. A personal aesthetic being in the page would skew the results for pages that are based on established communities. If you want, you can utilize the Personal Aesthetics Wiki to write down your personal aesthetic.

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