After a bunch of internal issues apparently plaguing the
project, Supreme‘s brand new skate promo finally arrives courtesy of William Strobeck. “JOYRIDE” lasts nine minutes and stars the younger members of the
Supreme crew, including Sage Elsesser, Nakel Smith, Sean Pablo, Tyshawn Jones
and Kevin Bradley. "Senior" riders are represented by the likes of Jason Dill, MarkGonzales, Lucien Clarke, Dylan Rieder, Anthony Van Engelen, and
Bryan Herman. Shot in NYC, LA and Paris. The video will mark the follow up to
this year’s hugely successful and original “Cherry” movie which was Supreme’s
long overdue return to skate films proper.
Showing posts with label Supreme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme. Show all posts
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Video: A Conversation with Supreme Creative Director Brendon Babenzien & “How Can I Be Down” Extended Trailer
By Such and Such shared a 13-minute conversation with Supreme creative director Brendon Babenzien who provides some insights into how he entered the industry and his take on style versus fashion. Of course Brendon has a pretty well-known history with Animal Farm/Pervert post Don Busweiler joining The Brethren cult so we are going take advantage of history by making this a double post highlighting both the interview mentioned and sharing a new extended preview for the captivating “How Can I be Down” documentary.
This eight minute preview includes chats with Erik Brunetti,
Eric Haze, Rick Klotz, Alyasha Owerka-Moore, Shepard Fairey, Ian MacKay and many more. Obviously the parallels between the cult like fandom people have for their streetwear and an actual cult is not lost on me or the folks being interviewed which makes this documentary all the more interesting; but If you have no idea what in the world I’m talking about take some time to watch
the clips below and you should be all caught up.
How Can I Be Down (Extended Trailer.) from Louis L on Vimeo.
Labels:
Animal Farm,
Brendon Babenzien,
Clothing,
Don Busweiler,
Eric Haze,
Erik Brunetti,
Fashion,
Ian MacKay,
Lifestyle,
Pervert,
Pop Culture,
Rick Klotz,
Shepard Fairey,
Skate,
skateboard,
Sports,
Supreme
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
A Visual History of Stüssy's Advertising Campaigns (1986-1991)
Stüssy is one of
those companies that is synonymous with urban fashion, some would call it the
godfather of street wear, it most certainly has withstood the test of time and
even inspired the launch of other iconic brands like Supreme who’s James Jebbia
famously worked with Shawn Stussy for years before forming what many consider
to be the industry standard for this generation.
I recall first
being introduced to the iconic brand in the mid 80’s when I started to skate,
the tribal logo created by founder Shawn himself was instantly recognizable and
appealing as where their ads which applied
a great punk rock aesthetic to them with their collage like construction.
I remember flipping through the pages of Thrasher Magazine
each month excited to see the latest one, cutting them out and sticking them on
my bedroom wall for inspiration. I’m much older now and those torn pages obviously
no longer grace my bedroom walls but I am just as attracted to the graphic work
as I was when I was a kid and have recently noticed a nod to the past in some
of their newer marketing which most certainly put a smile on my face and
inspired this piece.
Stüssy has never hired out ad agencies or creative
consultants. All ad’s are created in-house with a creative director leading the
vision. Here is a breakdown of some of the important folks involved with the campaigns
over the years .
Ron Leighton (1983-1986)
Ron met Shawn in the early 80’s when he and his wife,
Michele, produced an ad for Newport Surf and Sport that featured some pieces
from Stüssy. Shawn liked what he saw and asked Ron to do his thing on some ads for
the emerging clothing brand, the two worked together for a period of three
years amassing a large collection of photographs hallmarked by the globally
recognized grainy black and white aesthetic Stüssy is known for.
Shawn Stüssy (1987-1989)
Shawn himself took over after Ron left in 86 and continued
to combine his noteworthy graphic talents with his distinctive taste in humor.
Shawn had an eye for ambiguous imagery and when he came across something he
liked, he would shoot it, re-purpose it and add his own mark on the photographs often with a hip-hop inspired phrase in his iconic handwriting.
David Dobson (1989-1990)
Outside of California David spent portions of his life in
Calcutta, India, Kenya, Egypt, and Sri Lanka, where he was exposed to various cultures
that went on to influence his work. As a fan of Stüssy, David cleverly reached
out to the brand for a box of t-shirts to take along on a missionary trip just
to see what he could come up with. What the brand got in return was a series of
photographs that displayed his unique
ability to connect and communicate with the diverse cultures in a natural way
that didn't look staged. Most impressive perhaps is that his work still looks just as fresh today as it did two decades ago.
Friday, July 15, 2011
New Kaws Items
Original Fake and Supreme collaborate for a new t-shirt that was releases today. On the front you can find a Supreme graphic by Kaws and on the back they placed both brand logos under the neck. The tee comes in white and in black and is now available from the Supreme online store.
Labels:
Design,
Fashion,
Graffiti,
Hennessy,
Kaws,
Original Fake,
Skateboarding,
Supreme
Friday, July 8, 2011
Kidult ‘Supreme Vandalized Store Front’ T-Shirt
This is a somewhat amusing release. French graffiti artist Kidult has released a shirt with a graphic showcasing his trademark fire extinguisher tag from May’s bombing of the Supreme New York City flagship store on Lafayette street. You can purchase the tee now from his site here.
KIDULT x SUPREME NY from eric on Vimeo.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Damien Hirst: Supreme Skatebaords round 2
Damien Hirst's publishing company Other Criteria, devoted to producing affordable limited editions and multiples, announced earlier this week that its Hinde Street store in London would sell a selection of skateboard decks Hirst designed. You may recognize the decks, based on Hirst's Spin and Spot paintings, from a series Hirst originally designed in 2009 for the hi end skateboard company Supreme. The difference between the 2009 decks and the 2011 ones? None, except that now they're being sold directly through Hirst's own publishing company for a whole lot more money. Hirst's decks premiered at Supreme in 2009 to round-the-block lines, with some fans camping out on the sidewalk the night before. The original, graphic skateboard designs sold for under $100. At Other Criteria, however, an edition of 40 decks signed by Hirst and embellished with an original 2011 drawing will run you a cool £1,200 ($1,945). The larger, unsigned edition of 160 will now cost £480 ($778). Originaly Supreme produced 500 copies of two different decks (Spin and Spot), plus 100 artist proofs for each. The artist retained the 200 AP decks, now for sale, as part of his original deal with Supreme.
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