![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/pjimage-1-14.jpg)
7. Flag Clothes
Regardless of your morals, there’s something a little odd about wearing your country’s flag as clothing — it always winds up looking tacky, particularly if you’re at Woodstock, where those white stripes will undoubtedly get brown, green, and gray A.S.A.P.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/7-72.jpg)
8. Metallic Fabric
Remember when folks’ idea of “space age” clothing just consisted of super shiny fabrics and out-there hats? We’re pretty lucky that in 2016, we aren’t dressing like this — it just seems hot and sweaty.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/8-66.jpg)
9. Bell-Bottoms
Of all the fashion trends in history, bell-bottoms are one of the most controversial. Some folks claim they’re a tragic misuse of fabric; others think they are figure-flattering trousers that everyone should own. We’re going to vote in favor of the former, if only because it’s very rare that an outfit featuring bell-bottoms actually looks good.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/9-62.jpg)
10. Bowler Hats
We’re not quite sure why guys started rocking this very elementary trend once again, but it sure did make their heads look round.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/10-59.jpg)
11. Lime Green
This color gets its own slide for being one of the universally least flattering shades of them all — and yet it was inexplicably popular among those in the mod subculture throughout the mid- to late-1960s.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/11-51.jpg)
12. Tie-Dye
Sure, the tie-dye trend inspired a cool hair coloring technique years later, but folks went way overboard with it in the ’60s. Tie-dye shirts, pants, headbands, blankets — the list went on and on and on until everything people owned in the ’60s was covered in rainbow dye.
![](https://staging.doyouremember.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/12-49.jpg)