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What is your favorite drama? Is it a historical saga, a modern romance, or the classic rich-boy-meets-girl tale? No matter the genre, K-dramas share recurring plot beats. The love triangles, the rare otherworldly love interests, the occasional emotional cheating, and all sorts of misunderstandings that keep us pressing play on one more episode. Some of those tropes are easiest to spot through what the actors are wearing. Here are six outfits to keep an eye out for the next time you settle in for a binge.

The Laid-Back Style
The laid-back style usually means simple clothing, sweatpants, a baggy shirt, or muted neutrals. This is almost always a transformation flag, and who does not love a good transformation scene? These makeover montages are as old as the genre and turn up most often in rags-to-riches stories. You can find versions of them in Boys Over Flowers, Oh My Venus, and Fated to Love You. A rich guy meets a girl and styles her up to meet his mother's standards, or the glow-up happens out of revenge. A famous twist comes from She Was Pretty, which flips the trope: instead of changing to convince the world the female lead is rich, Kim Hye Jin cleans herself up to show others who she really is.
The Messy Bun and Pajamas
The in-between stage, where the female lead is questioning her feelings, usually shows up with ramen on the table or a notebook in her lap and pajamas on. Messy hair plus a comfy two-piece set is an unspoken signal that something is about to shift. In What's Wrong With Secretary Kim, Kim Mi So pulls her hair into a quick ponytail and stays in her cozy PJs as she pines over Lee Young Joon, and that single styling choice tells you exactly which scene we are heading toward.

The Other Well-Dressed Male
Familiar with love triangles? If a second guy is introduced early and the script does not bother to label him as the male lead's best friend with no romantic interest in the heroine, a love triangle is almost guaranteed. He can be styled all sorts of ways. In Strong Woman Do Bong Soon, Gook Doo is dressed in clean, polished pieces that echo Min Hyuk's look, but the key is that his outfit is simple enough not to overpower the main lead while still standing out from the background. That visual balance is the giveaway that he is the second lead, not a friend.
The Rich Mother Aesthetic
Every K-drama needs a good antagonist, and the rich mother is one of the most reliable. She often shows up next to the transformation trope, though not always. These moms are some of the most frustrating antagonists on screen, but also some of the most stylish. Expect statement jewelry, sharp blazers, a fur coat draped over the shoulders, and a perfectly tailored pencil skirt. The classic example is Gu Jun Pyo's mother in Boys Over Flowers. She looks rich, she acts like she runs the world, and she is willing to do almost anything to keep her son away from Jan Di.

The Best Friend With Cute Outfits
Side characters deserve better in dramas, but they often do not get much development. What they do get are very cute outfits. The styles have shifted over time, from the colorful tops of the Boys Over Flowers era to the fashion-forward dresses in She Was Pretty. What do those cute outfits mean? A common story structure is to have the lead's best friend fall for one of the other lead's close friends, specifically not a coworker. It can end sweetly or it can end in heartbreak. You see this play out in Fight for My Way, where Seol Hee goes through a tumultuous, very relatable relationship with Joo Man.

The Mature Reunion Outfits
The mature reunion outfits usually arrive near the end of a drama. After a long fight or a split, the two leads meet again. Maybe there was an engagement to someone else, a friendship that collapsed, or a torrential breakup in the middle. This trope is a clean way of wrapping things up, but it also leaves room for whether a sequel is coming. Reunion outfits often skew more mature to suggest a time jump, think tailored skirts and proper suits. In Tempted, also known as The Great Seducer, Soo Ji and Shi Hyun meet again after years apart. Their outfits match up, the ending leaves you wanting more, and the trope does its job perfectly.

There are countless outfits to analyze and obsess over. Who knows? Maybe those earrings on a side character will turn out to represent her status and future plot beats. It is fascinating to see recurring themes in dramas that have quietly shaped Korean fashion. What are some recurring outfits, the ones that come with tropes, that you have noticed in your favorite K-dramas?
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