These Fashion Brands Are Starting to Bootleg Themselves

With the rise of streetwear came the explosion of bootleg fashion. Remember when the Ikea shopping bag became so popular that people started making accessories out of them?

Photo courtesy of Pinterest

According to Vogue, there has also been a rise in millennial bootleg artists. “Designer Ava Nirui of @avanope has built a career out of embroidering Gucci onto Champion hoodies and merging Carhartt with the Chanel name.” She came out with a counterfeit hoodie in collaboration with March Jacobs.  

Photo courtesy of Ava Nirui’s Instagram account

Another artist “Imran Moosvi, aka @imran_potato, uses Louis Vuitton and Gucci Monograms in almost everything—splicing them into Nike zip-up hoodies or creating natty ties from them.”

Photo courtesy of Imran’s Instagram account

Because of the quick popularity of this trend, some brands decided to release their own “bootleg” products. You may have seen pieces from Gucci with the logo spelled as “Guccy.” There are T-shirts, hoodies, and even bags with the misspelled name.

Photo courtesy of Gucci’s Instagram account

Vetements and Champion meshed their logos together for their collaboration, giving us a cursive masterpiece.

Photo courtesy of Highsnobiety

Italian brand Diesel also followed suit with their “So With the Flaw” campaign. During New York Fashion Week, they had a pop up store where you could cop their counterfeit “Deisel” clothing.

This trend doesn’t seem to be going anywhere but does this mean that actual fake stuff gets a free pass? We sure hope not!

 

Art by Yayie Motos

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