bape x supreme

This a collaboration with bape ,this brand was founded in japan by
 Tomoaki Nagao in 1993. It is specialized in streetwear for mens.womens and childrens.

There are 19 shops in japan over the world(
 Hong Kong, Nueva York, Londres, Taipei, China y Bangkok y Singapur )

HISTORY

The founder studied fashion at university and worked as editor of the fashion magazine. It was published in April 1993 in Harajuku, 2 thereafter a brand of its own and its chosen name was created. it was BAPE, a reference to the movie Planet of the Apes.3 In February 2011 the company will be published The Chinese band will be called the entire business; BAPE brand is one of the most popular urban fashion brands in Japan with celebrities, media, magazines, media

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The brand was founded by James Jebbia. Although he was born in the United States, he lived in England until he was 19.[ Jebbia has no title within the company.

The first Supreme store opened in an old office space on Lafayette Street in downtown Manhattan in April 1994. It was designed with skaters in mind with a unique design for the store layout: by arranging the clothes around the perimeter of the store, a large central space permitted skaters with backpacks to skate into the store and still feel comfortable. This store had its core group of skaters who served as its team in 1994, which included late actors Justin Pierce and Harold Hunter, and the first employees were extras from the Larry Clark film Kids.[

In 2004, a second location was opened on North Fairfax Ave in Los Angeles, California, which is nearly double the size of the original New York City store and features an indoor skate bowl. Other locations include Paris Opening in March 2016, London Opening in September 2011, Tokyo (HarajukuDaikanyama and Shibuya), NagoyaOsaka, and Fukuoka. The additional locations emulate the original Lafayette Street store’s design; stores feature rotating art displays, and use videos and music to attract attention.

Supreme stocks its own clothing label, as well as other skateboard brands such as VansNike SBSpitfireThrasher and Girl Distribution Company, among others. James Jebbia was quoted in saying that anything that Supreme releases will never be classified as «limited,» but notes that they make short runs of their products because they «don’t want to get stuck with stuff nobody wants.»[

On October 5, 2017, Supreme opened their 11th store—the second one in New York City—in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn.[ On October 6, 2017, James Jebbia confirmed that the label had sold a significant stake in the company of roughly 50% (around $500 million) to private equity firm The Carlyle Group.

Supreme plans on opening its 12th store, on Market Street in San Francisco, in early 2019.

COLLABORATIONS

Supreme has a diverse history of collaborations with various skateboard and fashion brands. Among their frequent collaborators include Nike/Air JordanVansClarksThe North Face,[HanesPlayboyLevi’sTimberlandColeman,Comme des Garçons, and Stone Island.

Supreme has also collaborated with brands to create a variety accessories and other non-clothing items such as a cruiser bicycle, bricks, crowbars, a gas-powered mini bike with Coleman, and an Everlast punching bag.[

On January 18, 2017, luxury fashion company Louis Vuitton held a fashion show where a collaboration between the two brands was confirmed. Pop-up stores featuring the collaboration were opened on June 30, 2017, in Sydney, Seoul, Tokyo, Paris, London, Miami, and Los Angeles. Louis Vuitton’s proposal for a pop-up store in New York City was denied by Manhattan’s Community Board No. 2 after residents expressed their «outrage that such an event was being proposed for [Bond Street]».In 2017, The Dapifer reported that Lacoste partnered with Supreme for a limited men’s capsule collection.[ One commentator noted that «Supreme clothing isn’t particularly remarkable — think T-shirts, jumpers, caps and leather accessories — but plaster that iconic red logo on a white shirt and suddenly, it’s worth hundreds of dollars», pointing out that «the brand’s success lies in its scarcity model. It releases a limited number of new products each week, nowhere near the number needed to keep up with demand», causing long lineups as well as inflated secondary market (resale) prices.[