
Here's how to survive ‘The Last of Us' in post-apocalyptic style
After an arduous two-year wait, The Last of Us has at last returned with its second season. Based on the acclaimed video game of the same name, the post-apocalyptic drama is set in a world ravaged by a mutated fungal parasite, causing what we've come to understand as zombie-like behaviour in infected humans. Led by Bella Ramsey and Pedro Pascal, the latter who is set for a banner year as Mister Fantastic in the upcoming Marvel franchise, the hit series is a masterclass not only in sci-fi thrills and heart-rending storytelling, but also in costume design.
While the show's premise and gritty settings posed unique limitations on its wardrobe, costume designer Cynthia Summers took on the challenge as an opportunity to create practical and durable ensembles that scream apocalypse-proof, all while staying true to each character's personality and visual design from the original game. Convincingly rugged and distressed, the show's versatile, largely unisex wardrobe quickly gained the attention and praise of cosplayers and fans alike, with some casual viewers even taking to forums like Reddit asking how they can channel the style of their favourite characters.
For the show's wardrobe, Summers looked to styles and materials with origins as blue-collar workwear, zoning in on pieces that everyday civilians would own—making it just as accessible to viewers. Hardy materials like denim feature heavily in the series, as do dense flannels and other pieces designed for utility, comfort and ease of movement. Considering the recent rise of fashion trends like gorpcore and utilitarian, it's easy to see the appeal of emulating this worn-in style.
With the series finally returning with its sophomore season, here is Vogue Singapore's guide to The Last of Us fashion staples for an apocalypse-ready wardrobe.
1 / 16 Versatile flannel
During season one of the show, Summers spoke about the popularity of the flannel shirts she dressed the cast in amongst fans of the show, so it's no surprise that these unisex tops are making a comeback this season. In this scene—hinting at a budding romance between Bella Ramsey and Isabela Mercad's characters—Ramsey's Ellie dons a cosy oversized button-down flannel shirt. Courtesy of Fjällräven
2 / 16 Fjällräven Värmland Heavy Flannel Shirt in Deep Forest, $215.40
Available at Fjällräven . Courtesy of Zara
3 / 16 Zara Check Shirt in Dark Navy, $99.90
Available at Zara . Courtesy of Filson
4 / 16 Filson Vintage Flannel Work Shirt in Black/Rust/Multi Plaid, $132.60
Available at Filson . Courtesy of HBO
5 / 16 Pocketed utility jackets
Amid the wintry chill that envelops this season of The Last of Us , layers are absolutely essential for our beloved survivors to weather the cold. Enter the utility jacket, which doubles as both a comfortable outerwear option and for its practical design—after all, it can't hurt to have a couple more pockets to hide your weapons in the chaos of a post-apocalyptic world. Courtesy of Carhartt
6 / 16 Dayton Jacket in Black Stone Canvas, $439
Available at Carhartt . Courtesy of Patagonia
7 / 16 Patagonia Iron Forge™ Canvas Ranch Jacket, $139
Available at Patagonia . Courtesy of Lululemon
8 / 16 Lululemon Hooded Utility Jacket, $268
Available at Lululemon . Courtesy of HBO
9 / 16 Beanies
While known as more of a staple accessory today, beanies were first conceived as a form of work wear as a practical, comfortable way to keep hair out of one's face, with the added bonus of extra warmth. In that vein, many characters—especially those out on foraging and rescue missions—have already been spotted in a myriad of beanies in our first glimpses of season two. Courtesy of Patagonia
10 / 16 Patagonia Fun Hog™ Beanie in Phosphorus Green, $55
Available at Patagonia . Courtesy of Fjällräven
11 / 16 Fjällräven Tab Hat in Deep Forest, $49
Available at Fjällräven . Courtesy of Marni
12 / 16 Marni Logo Embroidered Ribbed Knit Beanie, $368.35
Available at Cettire. Courtesy of HBO
13 / 16 Timeless denim
Not only are they an eternal style essential, with every generation owning them in one form or another, hardy denim pieces are also some of the most likely to endure the wear and tear of post-apocalypse life. Naturally, many of the characters are spotted in aged or distressed denim pieces. Case in point: the jeans worn by Tommy and Maria, the leaders of the survivor's settlement in Jackson, and their son Benji. Courtesy of Acne Studios
14 / 16 Acne Studios Loose fit jeans - 2021F, $800
Available at Acne Studios . Courtesy of Net-a-porter
15 / 16 Frame Le Slim Palazzo high-rise wide-leg jeans, $411
Available at Net-a-porter . Courtesy of Levi's
16 / 16 Levi's Blue Tab™ Women's Carve Jeans in Swell, $349.90
Available at Levi's .
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AsiaOne
7 hours ago
- AsiaOne
Pedro Pascal finds it scary joining the MCU , Entertainment News
Pedro Pascal found it scary joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) with The Fantastic Four: First Steps. After starring in other major franchises like Game of Thrones, Wonder Woman, The Last of Us and Star Wars through The Mandalorian, the 50-year-old actor is set to become a leading figure in the MCU as Reed Richards/Mr Fantastic, though Pascal has admitted doing so is quite the daunting task. Speaking with Collider, he said: "Each time you step into one, and you feel like this can't be scarier, you find out, 'Oh, this is scarier.' "Going into Game of Thrones, going into DC, going into Star Wars, and then the entire gaming world that introduced itself like an atom bomb to me. And in the best way, because I learned very, very quickly the incredible medium of storytelling that's happening within gaming." Even so, the Gladiator II actor added "anchoring" himself to his Fantastic Four co-stars Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach was the "perfect antidote to the fear and to the pressure" of joining such a major cinematic franchise like the MCU. He said: "The kind of crown, top of the mountain feels like stepping into something like this. That's why the lucky thing is to anchor yourself so completely to a partnership, to your colleagues, to the original kind of authorship of this particular telling of the Fantastic Four - under, you know, basically the best in the business. "It holds you and really, really can be the perfect antidote to the fear and to the pressure and stuff like that. You just wrap yourself around that." In The Fantastic Four: First Steps, the titular team gain extraordinary powers after a cosmic accident during their exploration of outer space. As they grapple with their new identities, the Fantastic Four must unite to stop a rising threat that could destroy Earth. Pascal previously admitted playing Mr Fantastic was "really intimidating" because he "really wants to make people happy" with The Fantastic Four: First Steps - which will be released in July. He explained to Entertainment Weekly: "It was really intimidating. I relied on the people that I was around to hold me to the experience and help get me through it. "Stepping into something like Game of Thrones and then going into the early days of Netflix with Narcos and then Star Wars and the world of video games with The Last of Us, each time I've felt like I couldn't top how intimidating the last one was. "They're all scary because you really want to make people happy, especially if it's something that's widely known with particular expectations around it because you want those expectations to be met. "You also want to be authentic to yourself so that it can be the best that it can be for anybody who wants to be entertained by a story and travel with us into this world." [[nid:716098]]

Straits Times
17-05-2025
- Straits Times
Star of The Last Of Us Pedro Pascal drops F-bomb in Cannes, urging filmmakers to resist Trump
Star of The Last Of Us Pedro Pascal posing at the Cannes Film Festival on May 17, where his latest movie, Eddington, is in competition. PHOTO: REUTERS Star of The Last Of Us Pedro Pascal drops F-bomb in Cannes, urging filmmakers to resist Trump CANNES, France - Chilean-American actor Pedro Pascal urged Hollywood to 'f*** the people that try to make you scared' on May 17, while admitting it was 'scary' to speak out against US President Donald Trump. Asked about Trump's hardline immigration policies, the The Last Of Us and Narcos star told reporters: 'It's very scary for an actor participating in a movie to sort of speak to issues like this.' 'I'm an immigrant. My parents are refugees from Chile. We fled a dictatorship, and I was privileged enough to grow up in the US after asylum in Denmark... I stand by those protections,' the 50-year-old told a news conference in Cannes. He stars in new film Eddington alongside Joaquin Phoenix, an intense and darkly satirical examination of America's toxic politics set in New Mexico during the Covid-19 pandemic. Directed by horror specialist Ari Aster, it premiered at the Cannes film festival on May 16. Echoing a message from Robert De Niro on the opening night of Cannes, Pascal insisted that the film industry needed to find the courage to resist political pressure. 'So keep telling the stories, keep expressing yourself and keep fighting to be who you are,' he said. 'F*** the people that try to make you scared. And fight back. 'This is the perfect way to do so in telling stories. And don't let them win.' De Niro, who accepted a Cannes lifetime achievement award on May 13, urged the audience of A-list directors and actors to resist 'America's philistine president'. Aster parodies everyone in his film from gun-loving southern US conservatives to virtue-signalling white anti-racism activists. Emma Stone (La La Land and Poor Things) plays Phoenix's wife who gets sucked into a world of paedophile-obsessed right-wing conspiracy theorists. Eddington star Emma Stone (centre) trying to avoid a bee next to (from left) director Ari Aster, actor Austin Butler and actor Pedro Pascal at the movie's Cannes premiere. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Aster admitted to worrying about America's direction and set out to dramatise it in his film, whose early satire gradually gives way to much darker material. Asked on May 16 if America's polarised politics and the breakdown in trust in the media could be setting the country on a path to mass violence, he said, 'That is certainly something I'm afraid of. 'It feels like nothing is being done to temper the furies right now,' he added. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
13-05-2025
- Straits Times
Did a TV show hurt your feelings? Fanfic ‘fix-its' offer justice
Pedro Pascal in The Last Of Us 2. PHOTO: MAX NEW YORK – As a long-time player of The Last Of Us video game series (2013 to 2024), Ms Sam Gaitan knew the death was coming. Still, the brutal murder of protagonist Joel in the April 20 episode of the HBO adaptation of the same name hit her hard. It was already midnight when she went on social networking site Tumblr to read fan reactions. Then, in a fit of inspiration, she started writing. 'I was a wreck and I needed to get those strong emotions out,' Ms Gaitan, a tattooist and artist, said in a recent phone interview. By 5am, she had written 3,761 words featuring Joel and Red, an original character Ms Gaitan had previously created, and an alternative scenario that spares Joel from his on-screen fate. Writing under the alias oh_persephone, she posted the story on AO3, an online repository for fan fiction and other fan-created art , and crashed until her dogs woke her up the next morning . 'It probably wasn't the most coherent thing I've written,' she said, laughing. 'But I figured other people could use it as much as I did.' Her urge to change the narrative is a familiar one among a subset of fans who write fan fiction, or fanfic – original stories that borrow characters, plots and settings from established media properties and are published mostly online on sites like AO3, Tumblr and Increasingly, these fans are taking matters into their own hands by writing 'fix-it fics' or simply 'fix-its', which attempt to right the perceived wrongs of a beloved work – and often provide some measure of emotional succour. The Last Of Us, which killed off its male lead surprisingly early in a hotly anticipated second season – a lead played, no less, by 'the internet's daddy' Pedro Pascal – has been particularly generative. Real numbers can be hard to track because of inconsistent labelling, but more than 50 The Last Of Us stories tagged 'Fix-It' were uploaded to AO3 in the week after Joel's death, ranging from about 300 words to almost 80,000. But if a TV writer can dream of it, a fan can feel betrayed by it. Fix-its have appeared in recent months for series including Daredevil: Born Again and The White Lotus 3, all of which contained whiplash-inducing plot twists. 'When something happens to a character that doesn't resonate with how you see them, and you can't let it go, you want to get out there and tell the story differently,' said licensed therapist Larisa Garski , who co-wrote a book with fellow therapist Justine Mastin titled Starship Therapise: Using Therapeutic Fanfiction To Rewrite Your Life. And when that something is death, fix-it writing can resemble the bargaining stage of grief. 'We're going to fanfic to mourn,' Ms Garski said. 'We're going to fanfic to try and take back agency because this beloved character has been taken from us.' Fan fiction has existed arguably for centuries, but its modern incarnation traces back at least as far as the Star Trek fandoms of the late 1960s, whose members published fanzines with stories by fans for fans. By the 2000s, the popularity of fanfic had exploded with widespread internet access. Written often under pseudonyms, fanfic can be wildly experimental, playing with storytelling conventions, timelines, identity and unabashed eroticism. Occasionally, fanfic evolves a life of its own. Most notably, the Fifty Shades trilogy of erotic novels (2011 to 2012) began as fanfic of the Twilight book series (2005 to 2008). Science fiction and fantasy are especially fertile ground for fan fiction. As Ms Garski put it, they echo the myths that people have long improvised and riffed on. Superhero stories are a prime example. Fanfic sites erupted, for instance, after Disney+ revived superhero series Daredevil in March, nearly seven years after Netflix cancelled it, only to gun down the beloved character Foggy (Elden Henson) in the first 15 minutes. Elden Henson as Foggy in Daredevil: Born Again. PHOTO: DISNEY+ Many fans had considered the best friend of Daredevil (Matt Murdock, played by Charlie Cox) to be the show's heart, soul and conscience. Almost as quickly as Foggy died, the fix-its started streaming in, much of it drawing from decades of existing comic book lore. In one story, Daredevil offers Mephisto, a demon and frequent adversary of Spider-Man, his soul in exchange for a magical do-over. In another, Dr Strange casts a resurrection spell. Lawyer Gabrielle Boliou, whose AO3 name is ceterisparibus, wrote a story at breakneck speed that reimagines an existing comic book plotline in which Foggy survived and went into witness protection. In her fanfic version, Foggy is saved by a heroic female emergency medical worker. 'At one point, I had nine different tabs open on gunshot wound survival possibilities, and I watched a YouTube video on a paramedic,' she said. Shows more rooted in reality get the fix-it treatment too. Ms Kensi Bui, a graduate student in clinical mental health counselling, is an avid fan of the HBO drama The White Lotus (2021 to present). But it was not until the Season 3 finale in April, and the death of sweet Chelsea (Aimee Lou Wood), that she felt compelled to write, or even read, The White Lotus fan fiction. Walton Goggins (left) and Aimee Lou Wood in The White Lotus 3. PHOTO: MAX So Ms Bui wrote a fix-it, under the name alittlemoretime, in which Chelsea escapes Thailand with her troubled boyfriend Rick (Walton Goggins), who was also fatally shot. 'I really wanted what's best for Chelsea and felt like she deserved a happier ending,' she said. NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.