Break out your oversized plaid scarves, tidy bootcut jeans, and pumpkin spice lattes because it appears that we’re on the precipice of “Christian Girl Autumn.” That’s right—as Hot Girl Summer fades into the shimmering, dusty pink sunset, there is apparently a threat that we’ll be left with a decidedly less fun and sexy seasonal trend.
What is ‘Christian Girl Autumn’?
Last week, Twitter user @lasagnabby tweeted the following image of two approximately 20-something women with matching outfits, bags, and brown ankle-length boots.
“Hot Girl Summer is coming to an end, get ready for Christian Girl Autumn,” it read, along with the leaves emoji and heart-eyes emoji. “AND THEY MAD PERIOD,” added a follow-up tweet.
https://twitter.com/lasagnabby/status/1159967906656149504
https://twitter.com/lasagnabby/status/1160627717043306496
The work was actually that of a 19-year-old college student from Long Island and self-proclaimed Twitter troll named Giovanni, as BuzzFeed News later learned.
Inspired by Hot Girl Summer, Giovanni said he thought to himself, “why not pretend to be a white Christian girl?” He then found the image by googling “cute church outfits” and “all scarf outfits.” He didn’t know the women in the photo.
Christian Girl Autumn memes
Regardless, the “Christian Girl Autumn” photo and caption clearly struck a chord with people, as it went on to become a full-blown meme as others joked about the women in the photos and others that generally resemble them.
me and my girls Karleigh, Caitleighynn, and Makelynn-Lee going to bible study after our prayer circle at starbucks during christian girl autumn pic.twitter.com/UjCYoQFj71
— Cowboy Mack (@space_cowb0_y) August 11, 2019
https://twitter.com/quadderz1/status/1160765791366713345
Eventually, the two women featured in the original “Christian Girl Autumn” tweet caught onto the joke, and they possess a much greater degree of chill than the photo would suggest.
Emily Gemma, a 31-year-old Tulsa, Oklahoma mother of two who blogs at “The Sweetest Thing” and Caitlin Covington, a 29-year-old Winston-Salem, North Carolina blogger who runs “Southern Curls and Pearls,” say that the photo in question is actually three years old. It was taken during a trip the influencer friends took to Highlands, North Carolina, to photograph their 2016 “fall content” for the season.
Both Gemma and Covington understand why the photo went viral and admitted that it was a little over the top.
“We were kind of matching. It was cheesy,” Gemma told BuzzFeed News. “We look so basic in our blanket scarves and holding our Pumpkin Spice Lattes,” added Covington.
And although both women are indeed Christian, they say people shouldn’t be so quick to make assumptions about them.
“That’s not me at all,” said Covington, of the accusations some have made about the two friends being anti-LGBTQ, among other things. “I’m a nice person and I love everyone and I’m accepting of everyone.”
Once they caught wind of the Christian Girl Autumn meme, both women took to Twitter to joke about their newfound viral fame.
https://twitter.com/EmilyAnnGemma/status/1160725173668126722
Ok at least give credit to me & @EmilyAnnGemma! https://t.co/rr1DlFNXLc
— Caitlin Covington (@cmcoving) August 11, 2019
Wow I love you guys 💓 https://t.co/u38bF7oF2e
— Caitlin Covington (@cmcoving) August 12, 2019
I wish I had just half of yall’s creativity https://t.co/O3AFEpCCsK
— Caitlin Covington (@cmcoving) August 13, 2019
They both also made sure to share photos of their current fall looks, lest anyone think they’re three years out of style:
No shame in my fall fashion game… also no blanket scarves or Celine handbags! (But there’s nothing wrong with either of them!) pic.twitter.com/Ow7szTECH4
— Emily Gemma (@EmilyAnnGemma) August 12, 2019
If all of Twitter is gonna make fun of my fall photos, at least pick some good ones! 🤣 Super proud of these. For the record, I do like pumpkin spice lattes. Cheers! ☕️ pic.twitter.com/QzflqTwqAE
— Caitlin Covington (@cmcoving) August 12, 2019
If nothing else, you have to give mad respect to Gemma and Covington for having such a sense of humor about the whole thing. And maybe, it’s also a good lesson for the rest of us not to so quickly judge a book by its cover.
READ MORE:
- How ‘you hate to see it’ became a meme to express disappointment
- What does ‘yeet’ mean—and how did it become a meme?
- The ‘I’m baby’ meme is all about being comforted