For the longest time, fashion used "unisex" as a safe label - a small, beige corner filled with oversized tees and neutral hoodies. But genderless fashion was never meant to be a corner. It's not about erasing identity, it's about expanding it. It questions why clothes should ever belong to a gender in the first place.
At The Chic Indian, we're not chasing the buzzword; we're redefining what it means. Our unisex curation isn't about neutralizing style. It's about giving it more room to breathe. It's about letting individuality take center stage, where pieces belong to the wearer, not to a label marked his or hers.
Debunking the Myths: Genderless Doesn't Mean Shapeless
One of the biggest misconceptions about genderless fashion? That it's plain or shapeless. In reality, it's the opposite, it's expressive, sharp, and rooted in intention. It's about choice. Take the Denim Sleeveless Jacket worn effortlessly by both men and women. It's the kind of piece that doesn't adapt to the wearer; it reflects them. It's bold, architectural, and distinctly individual.
Genderless fashion isn't about stripping away femininity or masculinity, it's about the freedom to hold both, or neither, and still make it your own.
The Rise of Fluidity
If there's one generation pushing this forward, it's Gen Z. For them, identity isn't binary. It's layered, fluid, and expressive. Clothes are no longer gender-coded; they're mood-coded. That's why pieces like the Frosted Convertible Jeans exist, adaptable, artistic, and worn beautifully by anyone who chooses them. It is function-meets-form, but without boundaries.
Beyond Marketing: A Real Design Philosophy
Let's be honest, genderless fashion isn't a tab on a website. It's not about adding a new "unisex" section. It's about design, storytelling, and the intention behind every stitch.
At The Chic Indian, that philosophy runs deep. From Econock's Zoran Tote and Arious Tactical Satchel, to Rosani's Brook Pants and Mamvwa Shirt, our collection champions individuality through colour, texture, and silhouette. These are not accessories and clothes made to fit into gendered boxes; they're made to fit your story.
Clothes have always been cultural artifacts. They hold stories, emotions, and identities. Designing without the limits of gender allows them to do what they were always meant to: express. A kurta, a denim jacket, a tailored shirt - they don't need to belong to him or her. They just need to belong to you.
Genderless fashion isn't the future, it's already here. Woven quietly into wardrobes, stitched into the way people dress, and embodied in how designers create.
At The Chic Indian, we're simply giving it a home.