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Simplicity Belt Stone Cut Coin WalletPavilion Daypack See allDiamond Supply Co with Bryant Tamayo.# Car Club Collection, available this Saturday đđDiamond Supply Co with .Hi # # đ @ 9AM PST #Diamond Supply CoThis past weekend we hosted Jeron Wilson's 11th Annual Poker Tournament at the Diamond Store in LA, head over to our blog and check out the full re-cap, congrats to our man RJ who came in and took home the 5K purse! â ď¸âĽond Supply CoDiamond Supply Co. and Bootsy Bellows took over Aspen, Co. this past weekend with Alchemist and G-Eazy for the X Games. Check out the video re-cap! #Posnd Supply CoDiamond Supply Co. took over Paris a week ago, check out the video of what went down in Paris. #Posted by Diamond Supply Co added 3 new photos.Spring 2017 Delivery 1 is now available online! All n/, along with all new tees, fleece, cut-n-sew, accessories and more đ # # #Diamond Supply Co added 3 new photos.A look and in-store at Diamond LA/SF/NY Gifts for your Valentine

Gifts for Valentine's Day Metropolitan Soft Backpack in Wild Beast Print Leather Sunnies for the Big Game Coach NY Spring 2017 Coach 1941 Spring 2017Thatâs right, the apparent longtime friends Nicky Diamonds and Travi$ Scott are currently cooking up a capsule collaboration. Announced via Twitter with an accompanying image, the apparel looks to be tour-merch-inspired, including a top that pays homage to vintage rap albums. No word on the release, so stay tuned. â Diamond Supply Co. (@NickyDiamonds) January 19, 2016 What to Read Next Earn up to $500 during The Container Storeâs 11 Day elfa Bonus! Must Haves for Valentine's Day Buckle's Spring Launch Event Discounts on salon services! The Container Store's annual elfa Sale Fred Meyer Jewelers Make A Birthday WishPhilip Post has a hunch about his generation. âI think we were the last to really go outside,â the 20-year-old says quietly in New Yorkâs Ace Hotel. His self-designed pink tie-dye T-shirt stands out amid the crowd of trendy young professionals in earthtone button-ups.

âWhen we were kids, we werenât spending every waking moment online. We still saw life without the internet.â His observation is apt but ironic: during our conversation, Post reminisces effusively about spending his preteen days lurking message boards that focused on DIY streetwear brands like FUCT and Freshjive.
epcot hoodieThe skaters, writers, designers, and musicians that populated these virtual havens, like Hypeforums and Skateperception, both insulated and inspired preteens like Post, who soaked up game through computer monitors before bringing their ideas out into the real world.
mlp fim hoodieâI remember just spending hours looking at stuff, like the ICE CREAM website,â Post says of Pharrellâs then-budding apparel line, âscrolling through stuff I wanted but couldnât afford.â
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In the early 2000s, the streetwear brands Post loved were far enough on the fringes to be unencumbered by market pressures. Diamond Supply Co. ripped off Iron Maiden album covers, The Hundreds called themselves âhugeâ on T-shirts back when it was still ironic, and Supremeâs brand identity was as standoffish as its Lafayette Street storefront.
under armour camo hoodie mossy oakThe tiny universes that grew around these companies offered up a sense of community. âI was always just intrigued by streetwear culture, like having something that you have to know about and do research about to understand,â Post explains. But in recent years, streetwearâs air of secrecy has arguably been lost as its styles converged with runway fashion and spread through platforms like Instagram and Tumblr, where hashtags have all but eliminated the hunt. Now, streetwear marketing tacticsâlike limited quantity releases, loud collaborations, and marked-up resalesâare the norm for big names like Nike and H&M.

But for all the hand-wringing you could do about the selling-out of streetwear, this current state of affairs has galvanized a batch of young, self-starting designers who are placing a strong brand above all and making great clothes in the process. With irreverent, self-expressive designs buoyed by cult followings, these are labels that wonât be crossing over to runways any time soon, and thatâs just the way they like it. âIâm the type of person that if everyone is going one direction, I just naturally have to go the other,â Post tells me. His Dertbag line, now in its fourth season, subverts New England prep by flipping crisp, private school-ready designs on their heads with tie-dye and embroideryâpieces sport names like Mint Introvert and Yellow Funeral Services. âThe town where I went to school was really rich, and I definitely wasnât,â explains the Norwalk, CT native. âSo Dertbag kind of became my way of saying âfuck youâ to all of that while pointing out the fact that if you drive ten minutes in this direction, it feels like youâre in another country.

I wanted Dertbag to sort of play with the expectation of Connecticut versus its reality.â On the brasher end of the spectrum is the L.A. brand FTP, short for FuckThePopulation. Many influential labels have drawn on stark imagery to make statements, but few have pushed the envelope as far as FTP. Their latest collection of tees and rugbies is a series of unabashedly offensive designsâserial killer tributes and illustrations of how to use a condomâthat remind passersby that itâs still possible for a brand to not give a fuck. One white tee emblazoned with the words âTerrorist Organizationâ even caught the attention of Homeland Security: the brandâs founder, Zac Austin Clark, says they mailed him a letter ordering him to halt production of the shirt and shut down his PayPal account. Whether his designs scan as brave or baiting, Clark insists theyâre nothing more than a singular expression of his vision, a trait he sees as essential to true streetwear. âThatâs what Iâm always going to be about,â he says over the phone from his Skid Row office space.

âJust making the shit that I want, and selling it to people who actually fuck with it.â The foul-mouthed 21-year-old started making clothes in fifth grade, when he sold candy to classmates to fund his first collection: T-shirts with hand-drawn middle fingers stitched onto them. âI just always knew I needed to be making shit,â Clark says. âAll these brands now are doing this colorful Zumiez played-out shit, and I just feel like they donât deserve to be where theyâre at.â On the day we speak, someone spray-paints a giant âFTPâ tag over a Fairfax billboard for the label Pink Dolphin. Clark denies any involvement with the act of vandalism, but stands behind the sentiment, saying he welcomed a flood of praise from supporters when images of the tag went viral. âThat shit just feels so forced,â he says of the label. âI canât stand it.â Clark points to a crucial qualifier in streetwear design: a reverence for rawness. âThatâs the beauty of doing this without a business partner or some big distribution deal: you can just do whatever the fuck you want,â he says.

Or as Illegal Civilizationâs founder Mikey Alfred puts it: âStop trying so hard to be cool and go outside.â A peripheral friend of the L.A. collective Odd Future, Alfred got his start in fashion almost by accident, after filming a string of brash skate videos that maintained the same agitating edge that made the rap crew famous. âWe were making these skate videos for a long time, and they started getting a bunch of views,â he explains. âWe wanted to go to New York so bad, just to see it and shit, but we had no money. So we were like, âLetâs sell some shirts.ââ âThatâs the beauty of doing this without a business partner or some big distribution deal: you can just do whatever the fuck you want.â Illegal Civilizationâs initial designs reflected this spur-of-the-moment attitude, with crude illustrations that looked like they were sketched in an afternoon. But over time, the brand has moved into making visors, prints, polos, and more sophisticated shirt patterns.

Alfredâs latest collection is full of creased apparel, like dress pants and bright pink button-downs. When I meet him in Manhattan, heâs wearing a white polo with the Illegal Civilization logo embroidered on the chestââGrown man shit,â as he calls it. âThis new collection is just a reflection of where Iâm at in my life,â he says. âI just turned 20, so the clothes Iâm gonna be making now are gonna look different.â Following a string of well-attended art shows in L.A. and pastel collections of summer essentials, Alfred is determined to play things close to the chest. âWe get offers all the time to put our shit in big stores or whatever, but thatâs not what weâre about,â he says. âI think if you make clothes just to make a ton of money, youâre wack. I didnât come into this thinking about blowing up; I just make the things that Iâd want to wear.â Jakobi McLemore, the 21-year-old Houston native behind Death Precision, likes flying under the radar because it helps him maintain a tight design edit.

âAs an independent brand, itâs easier to make what you really want to make [when] you donât have to make twenty-thousand different pieces,â he says. âThe people buying it can feel like theyâre really part of something.â Death Precisionâs latest collection, the first run of new clothes for the brand in two years, is full of delicate, intentional pieces that warrant fanatic collecting: a pullover jacket reminiscent of â90s Ralph Lauren, headbands fit for a Wes Anderson film, and even a velour track jacket. Jakobi also plans to publish a lifestyle magazine called Whatâs More Precise, intended to give exposure to other small brands operating on a budget. âI want to build that type of community we had early on,â he explains. But nostalgia aside, Jakobiâs driving force is still making each piece feel new. âIf I can make every collection I do different than the last, then Iâm good. The people who have been with me from the beginning will always be there because they get something different.â