Citations:farmcore

Noun: "(neologism) an aesthetic and fashion movement inspired by rural farm living"

 * 2015, Andrew Lasane, "Here Is Photographic Proof That the Internet Has Killed Individual Style", Complex, 23 March 2015:
 * The project is called "Exactitudes," and so far it includes 154 different portraits series of men and women, from skaters and Gabbers, to hipsters in Amsterdam rocking the "farmcore" look and baristas in Milan.
 * 2019, Earl Cave, quoted in Dean Mayo Davies, "Earl Cave: rebel with a cause", Dazed, 10 September 2019:
 * “I like the way Dylan dresses, (it’s) almost like farmcore.
 * 2020, Isabel Slone, "Escape Into Cottagecore, Calming Ethos for Our Febrile Moment", The New York Times, 10 March 2020:
 * Cottagecore is related to grandmacore, faeriecore, farmcore and goblincore; other nostalgia-ridden aesthetic communities that, paradoxically, thrive on many of the most popular internet platforms of the day.

Noun: a music genre

 * 2008, Andrew Whelan, Breakcore: Identity and Interaction on Peer-to-Peer, page 286:
 * Brought together by a love for farming and a general concern for lack of rural representation in today's underground music scene, the crew are intent on bringing their unique 'farmcore' style to the forefront and initiating a rural takeover (2005).
 * 2008, Johnny North, "Law of the blue-collars", The Link (Concordia University), 10 June 2008, page 10:
 * The punk-indie-farmcore band are coming off a Sunday night performance in Montreal and are currently scheduled to tour all the way back to B.C. for the next few days.
 * 2010, Aaron Epp, "Carpenter", The Uniter (University of Winnipeg), 7 October 2010, page 12:
 * They dubbed their Hot Water Music meets John Mellencamp sound “farmcore.”