Crop tops, loose pants, film cameras. Meet the generation that works hardest to seem effortless.
TWS’s debut mini-album is called Sparkling Blue. The cover features six boys in white shirts and shorts against a clear sky. They look like they walked out of a summer afternoon and forgot to do anything interesting. The album is, by design, one of the most carefully constructed artifacts in fourth-generation K-pop. Its genre is labeled “Boyhood Pop.” A critic described it as sounding like “a conversation with friends during break time.” The members describe their music as being “as easy to listen to anywhere, anytime” as possible. This required nine credited songwriters, five separate SM Entertainment studio facilities, and several months of preparation.
Looking this casual is expensive. Looking this unlabored is, arguably, the hardest thing K-pop is doing right now.
We have spent a great deal of time discussing K-pop’s villain era — the dark concepts, the dystopian lore, the albums that arrive wrapped in black embossing and existential dread. But running parallel to that aesthetic, and in many ways in direct opposition to it, is something equally calculated and considerably harder to execute: the Chill Era. And it is worth examining what it actually takes to produce one.
Chapter One
The Chill Industrial Complex
The aesthetic logic of the Chill Era operates in direct mirror to the Villain Era. Where the Villain Era says “we are dangerous, extraordinary, outside your world,” the Chill Era says “we are exactly like you, just marginally better-looking and more musically gifted.” Where the Villain Era requires elaborate set design and narrative lore, the Chill Era requires something technically more demanding: the complete erasure of all visible effort.
Dark sets, elaborate lore, custom stage production. The effort is the point — you’re supposed to see it.
“We are extraordinary. Our world is not yours. The gap between us and you is the product.”
Mystique, drama, the fantasy of a world more interesting than their own.
Natural light, loose clothes, film-grain editing. The effort is the point — you’re never supposed to see it.
“We are just like you. The gap between us and you is almost nothing. That proximity is the product.”
Accessibility, warmth, the fantasy of a friendship that costs nothing to imagine.
The Villain Era, for all its drama, has a significant advantage from a production standpoint: darkness is legible. You put the idol in a black room with fog machines and backlit silhouettes and a meaningful smirk, and the concept is self-evident. The emotional register is pre-set. The audience knows where to look and what to feel.
The Chill Era has no such shortcut. “Natural” is one of the most technically demanding aesthetics in visual media precisely because there is no visual signature to hide behind. Every choice must look like a non-choice. Every element of production must be invisible. The second a Chill Era idol looks like they are trying to appear casual, the entire construct collapses. You cannot half-commit to effortlessness.
KpopWave Editorial
RIIZE’s debut concept at SM Entertainment was explicitly positioned around “relatable storytelling and an authentic growth narrative” — a phrase that contains at least three separate production imperatives embedded inside it. Relatable means the visual language must reference ordinary experience. Authentic means none of the construction can be visible. Growth narrative means the ordinariness must be legible across time, not just in a single image. This is a significantly more complex brief than “be dark and cool.”
Chapter Two
The Price of Effortless
Let us be specific about what “natural” actually costs.
The film camera aesthetic — the slightly overexposed, grain-textured, color-shifted images that read as spontaneous and analog — is produced almost entirely in post-processing on digital equipment. The grain is added. The color shift is applied. The vignette is a filter. A professional colorist charges between $200 and $600 per hour for the kind of meticulous digital treatment that makes an image look like it was taken by someone who didn’t think about it. NewJeans’ signature visual aesthetic — the one that launched a thousand “Y2K” mood board references on Pinterest — required Min Hee-jin, formerly of SM Entertainment where she shaped the visual identities of f(x), EXO, and Red Velvet, to spend years developing a system of references, a casting philosophy, and a production grammar that could sustain the illusion of spontaneity across albums, music videos, social media content, and live performances simultaneously.
The wardrobing logic deserves particular attention. The “I just grabbed this” aesthetic — the oversized hoodie, the slightly wrinkled white tee, the dad sneakers — represents a specific tier of studied casualness that operates entirely within a luxury framework. The hoodie is Stüssy or Acne Studios or a Korean atelier custom piece. The wrinkle is pre-set by a stylist. The sneakers are a collaboration release. The “not trying” look has a waiting list.
This is not K-pop’s invention. The global “quiet luxury” and “clean girl aesthetic” boom of 2022–2024 — which dominated Gen Z fashion discourse and drove brands like The Row and Totême to mainstream prominence — operated on exactly this logic. The clean girl aesthetic was the number one summer style trend for Gen Z and Millennials across the US in 2023 — defined as an “effortless, minimalist and casually elegant look.” K-pop absorbed this aesthetic, as it absorbs everything, with remarkable efficiency — and then added the layer of complexity unique to idol performance: the idol must not only look effortlessly casual in photos, but must sustain that appearance through music show performances, fan meetings, reality content, and airport exits, in front of professional cameras, under stage lighting, while executing technically demanding choreography.
The casualness must survive contact with a spotlight. That is a significantly higher bar than looking nice in a TikTok.
Chapter Three
Why Now — The Authenticity Trap
The Chill Era did not emerge from nowhere. It emerged from a specific cultural moment: the post-pandemic reckoning with over-production.
Between 2020 and 2022, K-pop’s dominant aesthetic was maximalist — high-concept, elaborate, visually dense. The pandemic had closed live venues and funneled creative energy entirely into recorded content, and recorded content had no ceiling on production value. Music videos became short films. Concept photography became gallery-quality. The elaborate fictional universes of TXT and ATEEZ expanded into lore documents and fan theory ecosystems that required significant investment to sustain.
Stage 1 — Maximalism (2019–2022): High production value as proof of seriousness. The more elaborate, the more committed. Fans reward visible investment.
Stage 2 — Authenticity fatigue (2022–2023): Gen Z globally begins signaling exhaustion with over-curation. The “clean girl” and “quiet luxury” aesthetics emerge as reactions to maximalism. “Real” becomes desirable. “Try-hard” becomes an insult.
Stage 3 — Manufactured authenticity (2023–present): The industry responds by producing “real” at scale. NewJeans, RIIZE, TWS, ILLIT — all deploy naturalness as a genre. The authenticity is itself curated. Nobody in this stage is unaware of the irony. It doesn’t matter.
What the Chill Era is selling, ultimately, is proximity. Not access — the idol is still unreachable — but the feeling of access. The loose hoodie says: we are the same. The basketball court says: you could find me here. The film-grain photo says: this was not planned for you, it just happened and someone caught it. None of these things are true. All of them work.
The TWS members described their debut goal as introducing themselves “in a manner that is just true to ourselves, as authentically as possible.” The album required nine songwriters and multiple studio facilities to achieve this. There is no contradiction here that either the group or their label would find troubling. Authenticity is a destination, not a starting point. You manufacture it, you iterate on it, you deploy it at scale. The fact that it requires the same infrastructure as any other K-pop concept does not make it less effective. If anything, the investment proves the point — the industry has determined that naturalness is worth the cost of producing it.
I want to return to the Villain Era for a moment, because these two aesthetics are more related than they appear. Both are responses to the same underlying condition: a generation of fans who are sophisticated enough to recognize production, and who have decided, in different ways, how they want to relate to it.
The Villain Era fans know the chaos is choreographed. They watch the lore videos and build the theory boards anyway. The pleasure is in the construction, in the collaborative fiction-making. The Chill Era fans know the casual is produced. They follow the “everyday” content and buy the basketball court hoodie anyway. The pleasure is in the proximity, in the feeling of a world slightly friendlier than the one they actually live in.
What both aesthetics share is a kind of sophisticated knowingness. Neither fan base is being deceived. Both are choosing a specific flavor of comfortable untruth — the untruth of a world more dramatic than reality, or the untruth of a world more casual than reality — and finding that choice worth the price of admission.
The most interesting thing about the Chill Era is not that it is fake. Of course it is fake. Every aesthetic is fake. The interesting thing is that it is the most technically demanding fake K-pop has produced. It is harder to make something look effortless than to make something look spectacular. The industry has figured this out. The question is whether the effort will eventually show — and whether, when it does, anyone will mind.
My guess: they won’t. They never do. The hoodie is very nice.