Limited drop · Live now
Fairy Grunge Cargo Pants.
Cargo pants belong to grunge like ripped seams belong to flannel.
All pieces
All of Fairy Grunge Cargo Pants.
Cargo pants belong to grunge like ripped seams belong to flannel. In the Fairy Grunge variant, soft details come in — ribbons, butterfly buckles, light washes next to black.
Why cargo pants work in Fairy Grunge
The wide cut and patch pockets bring the necessary edge. The fairy side comes through details: chains on belt loops, mesh inlays, pastels layered under dark tones. At Fūga Studios you'll find cargo pants that hit this contrast exactly — no costume aesthetic.
Combining without rules
Crop top, platform boots, one of the Fairy Grunge pieces as overlay. Or classic with band tee and Grunge Top. The cargo pant carries both. Who wants to understand the style deeper finds in the Soft Grunge Guide .
Frequently asked questions
Are cargo pants still modern in 2026?
Cargo pants have been a fixture of streetwear and grunge since the Y2K revival. In 2026 they're still worn — especially in wide cuts with a low rise.
Is there such a thing as Fairy Grunge?
Yes. Fairy Grunge combines ethereal elements like lace, tulle, and pastels with grunge's raw aesthetic — ripped fabrics, dark basics, heavy shoes.
Which cargo pants fit the Fairy Grunge look?
Wide, low-slung styles in black, gray, or faded green. Bonus: patch pockets, chain details, mesh inlays. Tight fits don't match the silhouette.
2015 → today
Fūga
風雅
Fūga isn't for everyone.
Berlin Plattenbau origins, Asia-inspired. Creative, but never fully fitting into the system. Tokyo 2015 as the starting point — six niche phases since then.
Today: Berlin · Shanghai · Tokyo · Poznań. We know our designers by name. Limited drops, no restocks.
We aren't dropouts. We know the system — went through training, worked, kept building. Both sides hold.
How Fūga evolved
One line. No closed worlds.
What started as Streetwear in Tokyo has shifted over the years — through different phases, our own and collective.
01
Streetwear / Anime
The first designs. Anime prints, Harajuku characters, Tokyo connection.
02
Techwear
Functional, layered, dark. Tokyo reduction translated into fabric.
03
Gothic
Heavier, uncompromising, more shadow. Grew up parallel to Techwear.
04
Opium
Berghain aesthetic with street cuts. Raw, black, Berlin avant-garde meets Streetwear.
05
Rave
Cyberpunk meets the Berghain floor. Reflective, tactical, sound-system ready.
06
Businesscore
Tailored cuts with Streetwear logic. Growing older without going 9-to-5. Stay edgy.
What comes next, we'll write when the time comes.





























