Five weeks ago, almost nobody outside a small corner of Instagram had heard of Kalu Putik . Now, his videos are everywhere.
The teenager behind the Instagram page kalupotics has crossed millions of followers in record time, and his clips regularly rack up tens of millions of views. Fashion accounts repost him. Meme pages obsess over him. Even people who normally scroll past fashion content seem to stop when his videos appear on their feed.
And honestly, it’s easy to see why. At first, his videos look like regular high-fashion styling clips. Sharp silhouettes, dramatic poses, runway-like confidence. Then comes the twist – the outfits are made from discarded tyres, crushed cans, plastic scraps, wires and random waste materials most people would throw away without a second thought.
That moment of realisation is what makes the videos impossible to ignore. In a social media world flooded with recycled trends, GRWM videos and identical aesthetics, Putik’s content feels genuinely unpredictable. And right now, unpredictability is one of the internet’s most valuable currencies.
Short-form platforms like Instagram and TikTok are designed around attention. Creators have barely a second to stop someone from scrolling away. Most fail almost instantly. But Putik’s videos are built for curiosity. The opening frame pulls viewers in because the styling looks polished and editorial. Then the brain suddenly registers that the “designer outfit” is actually made out of trash.
People watch again just to figure out how it was created.
That replay factor matters more than many creators realise. Modern algorithms reward videos that people rewatch, save and share. Content that surprises viewers or disrupts their expectations tends to perform better because it keeps attention locked for longer. Putik’s fashion experiments hit that sweet spot almost every single time.
But his rise is not only about shock value.
What makes his content stand out is that it doesn’t rely on language, trends or internet humour that only works in certain regions. There are no dance challenges, no lengthy explanations and no forced influencer personality. Someone watching in India, Brazil, Nigeria or the US instantly understands the visual story without needing subtitles.
That global accessibility gives creators like Putik a huge advantage in the Reels era, where visual storytelling travels faster than anything else.
His success also reflects a bigger shift happening in fashion culture online.
For years,
Putik’s work sits right at the centre of that change.
His videos feel artistic without trying too hard. They tap into sustainability conversations while still being entertaining enough for social media. Most importantly, they feel fresh. And on the internet, freshness is rare.
Fashion creators today are no longer competing only with other fashion creators. They are competing with memes, gaming clips, AI-generated videos and endless streams of entertainment. To survive in that ecosystem, fashion content has become more dramatic, more visual and far more performance-driven.
Putik seems to understand that instinctively.
Another interesting part of his rise is timing. Social media platforms are increasingly pushing smaller creators if their content performs well, regardless of follower count. In the past, going viral usually required years of audience-building or influencer connections. Now, a creator with barely any posts can suddenly reach millions if the content triggers enough engagement signals.
That’s exactly what seems to have happened here.
We’ve seen similar internet explosions before. Khaby Lame became globally famous through silent reaction videos that worked across every language barrier. Emma Chamberlain changed YouTube culture by making low-polish, chaotic editing feel authentic. Wisdom Kaye built a massive audience through cinematic fashion storytelling on TikTok.
What connects all of them is recognisability. The moment their videos appear, audiences know exactly who made them.
Putik is already developing that kind of visual identity, which is rare for such a new creator.
Of course, internet fame moves fast. Viral success on short-form platforms can disappear just as quickly as it arrives. Algorithms change constantly, and audiences eventually get used to trends that once felt surprising. The biggest challenge for novelty creators is avoiding repetition. Once viewers can predict the “twist,” the excitement often fades.
That means Putik’s next phase may be less about virality and more about evolution. Can he turn the scrap-material concept into a larger artistic vision? Can he grow from internet curiosity into a lasting fashion voice?
It’s too early to know. But for now, one thing is clear: in an online world where everyone is fighting for attention, Kalu Putik figured out how to make people stop scrolling. And that may be the hardest skill to master on the internet today.