If you were born in the eighties, like me, you were a child of Back to the Future. With that film came all the recognisable cultural touchpoints of the decade — the gilets and the hightop trainers, Huey Lewis and the News, the hairstyles, and, of course, the DeLorean. What’s more, Back to the Future introduced kids of the eighties to the 1950s, perhaps the most creative, optimistic and culturally potent era of modern history, when America made the post-war playbook all about them, and through architecture, fashion and automobiles showed that something beautiful could emerge from the horrors of the previous decade. In the fifties, concepts were reborn; audaciousness was rewarded. From colour schemes and materials to styles, it was a time for experimentation, and the chaos of creativity…
