Our Legacy Work Shop Stüssy Vol. 10 marks the latest release from the ongoing partnership between the Swedish label and the California streetwear brand. The collection consists entirely of deadstock garments sourced from previous collaborative volumes dating back to the partnership's launch in 2020. Each piece has been manually reworked through specialized workshops in Los Angeles and Stockholm, giving existing garments a new form through hand-applied customization and upcycling processes.
The release celebrates the tenth chapter of the collaboration and is accompanied by dedicated retail installations at Our Legacy Work Shop locations in Stockholm and London, as well as Stüssy Chapter Stores in New York and Paris. Two editorial campaigns support the launch, with photography by Elsa Hammarén in Stockholm and Antosh Cimoszko in Los Angeles.
Upcycled Streetwear Capsule
Our Legacy Work Shop Stüssy Vol. 10 Reworks Garments from Past Designs
Trend Themes
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Deadstock Streetwear — Surplus collaborative apparel is becoming a premium design input, creating room for scarcity-based collections that merge sustainability with resale-era desirability.
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Hand-reworked Capsules — Manual customization gives mass-produced garments individualized value, opening space for workshop-led fashion models that blur the line between product, craft, and collectible.
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Archival Collaboration Drops — Past partnership inventories are being reframed as new creative assets, suggesting potential for brands to extend collaboration lifecycles without relying on fresh production.
Industry Implications
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Streetwear — Limited-edition upcycling introduces a new status signal for streetwear, where provenance, alteration, and circularity can rival logo visibility.
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Fashion Retail — Dedicated installations around reworked collections transform stores into experiential proof points, positioning physical retail as a storytelling venue for circular design.
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Sustainable Fashion — Deadstock-led capsule releases demonstrate how waste reduction can support premium aesthetics, giving sustainability a more culture-driven and commercially expressive role.