Supreme T-Shirts Kermit

Your Daily Dose of Highsnobiety Receive the best in sneakers, fashion and street culture straight to your inbox! Kermit The Frog already appeared on the Spring/Summer 2008 skatedecks by Supreme. This morning Colette opened a small exhibition of photographs shot by Terry Richardson for Supreme. Also the Supreme x Terry Richardson x Kermit t-shirts went on sale this morning, one of the most talked about t-shirts in the last couple of weeks. Also check out some more pics of the event, the exhibition and more over at BKRW. Your Daily Dose of Highsnobiety Supreme Kermit the frog Kermit the frog wearing a supreme t-shirtWhen it comes to amazing Halloween costumes, we thought we had seen it all. First it was Steve UrkelKanye West. Then came the Gucci flip-flop costume inspired by that one Future song. But this Supreme costume might have them all beat. Although Halloween isn’t until later tonight, this Supreme fan just might have outdone every streetwear-themed costume we've seen this year.

He went all out with a custom Kermit the Frog costume replicating the now legendary Supreme x Kermit T-shirt from 2008. If the amazing costume wasn’t enough, he also nailed one of Kermit’s exact poses for the camera.It goes without saying that Supreme has a storied history of collaborations: be it with sportswear giants like Nike;
Toy Yorkie Puppies For Sale San Diegocontemporary artists like Damien Hirst;
Shk T-Shirtindustrial design brands like Braun;
Polaris Sportsman 90 Tires For Saleor filmmakers like David Lynch and Harmony Korine, the downtown Manhattan powerhouse has built and maintained strong creative ties across all areas of culture. But some of Supreme’s most memorable and resonant collaborations to date have been those that stepped outside the bounds of streetwear, fashion, and design, tapping pop cultural icons to expand the brand’s visibility and influence.

For reference, campaigns usually consist of a poster and photo t-shirt featuring a celebrity rocking the brand’s signature box logo design. The posters are then glued to walls, scaffolding, and mailboxes; the tees are always some of the most ravenously desired pieces in every collection. Occasionally, the brand will release behind-the-scenes videos and tidbits for fans to pore over online. These are the closest thing that Supreme comes to advertising in the traditional sense of the word. So when news broke of The Smiths frontman Steven “Moz” Morrissey’s conflicted involvement in Supreme’s upcoming spring/summer drop, HYPEBEAST took a look back on some of the skate-shop’s best endorsements, campaigns, t-shirts and photoshoots with A-listers of all walks of life, from rappers and supermodels to Muppets. Without any further ado these are Supreme’s Top 10 celebrity campaigns, as chosen by HYPEBEAST, in chronological order. Which is your favorite? Vote in our poll down below.

Supreme’s first photo tee featured Wu Tang Clan founding member Raekwon the Chef, his bodyguard, and none other than Elmo, all shot by photographer Kenneth Cappello. The juxtaposition of a rugged rapper and his strapped-up bodyguard alongside a cherished childhood toy is a perfect tableau representation of Supreme’s brand identity— playfully subversive, risque and yet instantly recognizable, not to mention plenty of braggadocio. Supreme may be a decidedly downtown fixture, popular as it is amongst teens and skaters that frequent its SoHo location, but the brand is definitely popping way beyond Houston Street. Case in point: the 2006 Dipset campaign, featuring Jim Jones and Juelz Santana (and his signature bandana headband). Supreme had the vision not only to tap Harlem’s Finest for its campaign, but deciding to eschew Cam’ron for local street favorites Capo and Juelz reflected a patrician street sense and an ear that remains pressed to the concrete to this day.

“Iron Mike” Tyson’s photo tee is one of Supreme’s most coveted, and for good reason: the simple, stark portrait of the boxer showing off his instantly-recognizable facial tattoo is timeless. Additionally, Tyson contributed a short video of himself sparring and a video where the boxer speaks on how he never understood graffiti growing up in New York to the brand’s 2007 collection campaign. Arguably the most infamous of Supreme’s celebrity co-signs, Kermit the Frog was definitely a huge land for Jebbia and co. Once again, Terry Richardson shot the Muppet’s portrait, which ended up stuck to every flat surface below 14th street. The T-shirts are prized possessions, and for good reason: there are few other products in the skate-shop’s storied archive that better reflect its sense of playfulness, youth, and humor. The late, great art-rocker and founding Velvet Underground member possessed the kind of downtown cool that defied explanation—you either get Lou Reed or you don’t.

The same could be said about Supreme. Reed’s standoffish posture and what-do-you-want look, as captured by Terry Richardson, made for another instant sell-out photo tee and another successful poster campaign. Mother Monster was at the peak of her powers in 2011 and Terry Richardson’s steamy photoshoot and resultant campaign—which showcased Gaga clad in little else but a soaked box logo tee— was nothing if not instantly iconic. While no t-shirt was produced from this campaign, Richardson’s lurid shots of Gaga ended up wheat-pasted all over downtown New York and proved to be an instant hit, in both branding and guerrilla marketing terms. If nothing else, Prodigy’s Spring/Summer 2011 photo campaign was proof of Supreme’s NYC roots: the tee features the Mobb Deep rapper in rap-squat position in front of an airbrushed background, complete with graffiti hailing Don P and Queens above all else. Supreme has always had hip-hop’s swagger and street sensibility in its DNA, so a collaboration with Memphis rap’s godfathers and Academy Award winners Three 6 Mafia came as a match made in heaven.

In addition to a much sought-after graphic tee featuring DJ Paul and Juicy J in full Supreme regalia (including a box-logo double-cup), the group also contributed a smoked-out video teaching viewers a chicken wing recipe. Supreme has a complex relationship with Kate Moss: the brand once flipped a Calvin Klein ad that featured the UK supermodel for a t-shirt, only to incur legal threats from the CK empire; then, in 2012, the brand managed to land Moss for a photo tee and poster campaign that was become part of the streetwear giant’s canon. The supermodel thus has helped create one of the most attractive campaigns in the brand’s extensive history. Neil “Not-So-Young-Anymore” Young’s Supreme campaign seemed almost as a rebellious act; Jebbia’s brand had been so hip and so hot for so long that a left turn seemed risky, yet oddly appropriate. The grizzled rocker’s ‘get off of my yard’ scowl had kids who had never heard of ”Heart of Gold” queuing up around the block.