Supreme Drops Steel Casket

Supreme's Spring/Summer 2026 collection includes a steel casket and a branded ATM, pushing boundaries on what constitutes fashion and reinforcing the brand's status as a cultural provocateur. The audacious product offerings represent the brand's most extreme merchandise to date. Social media buzz centers on Supreme's Arabic Box Logo Tee re-release from 1996/1997, dropping February 26 in pink, navy, black, white, grey, and camo for $44.

- A standard 18-gauge steel casket typically costs between $1,125 and $2,750, with prices varying based on the metal's thickness and features. - The brand has a long history of releasing unconventional accessories, including a clay brick, nunchucks, a money gun, and a hand-painted porcelain cupid figurine that retailed for $3,998. - The Supreme-branded clay brick from the Fall/Winter 2016 collection provides a case study in resale value; it originally sold for $30 and was later listed on eBay for as much as $1,000. - This is not the first time Supreme has released an item with political undertones; in the early 2000s, the brand released "Fuck Bush" skateboard decks and a "Regime Change" t-shirt critical of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. - The Arabic script on the box logo, which first appeared around 1997, roughly translates to "Glory." - Other collaborations in the Spring/Summer 2026 collection include a capsule with Marvel featuring Spider-Man on Vanson leather jackets and shorts, and another with the Ghostface character from the "Scream" film franchise. - Supreme has previously partnered with controversial artists for collections, including photographer Andres Serrano, known for his work "Piss Christ," and English visual artists Jake and Dinos Chapman, who are known for provocative and graphic art.

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