Monthly Archives: March 2012

HAPPY ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY THE HUNDREDS SANTA MONICA!

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Today is the big day!  The Hundreds Santa Monica store celebrates its one-year anniversary, and we’ve got something special for you guys.

This is the EXTREMELY limited anniversary tee we made in order to mark the momentous occasion – and when we say exclusive, we mean only 50 tees available at The Hundreds Santa Monica flagship store today!

Be one of the first to snag one tomorrow when they go on sale, and don’t miss out on all the great things happening throughout the day in honor of The Hundreds Santa Monica’s first birthday.

THE HUNDREDS BY DON PENDLETON ORIGINAL ARTWORK GIVEAWAY.

We’re pleased to announce the release of the The Hundreds by Don Pendleton collaboration available in all The Hundreds flagship locations today! Let’s celebrate by giving away some exclusive original artwork by the man himself, Don Pendleton.  We’ll throw in some gear, too!

For a chance to win some swag and an original hand-drawn sketch by Don Pendleton just “Like” the link on Facebook! Winners will be chosen at random and contacted directly.

Or you can double your chances of winning a sketch by Don Pendleton by tweeting #thehundredsbydonpendleton on Twitter.

The contest ends at noon PST on Monday, April 2nd, 2012.

Here’s the rad exclusive artwork that we’re giving away!

TOPPING THE BILLBOARDS.

From coast to coast, The Hundreds has got the skyline covered.

Here on the corner of Fairfax and Rosewood, we just put up our latest billboard for the The Hundreds by Don Pendleton collaboration, available now at The Hundreds’ four flagship stores as well as authorized skate retailers:

And on the other coast,… is there any more prime placement than this?

The Hundreds New York takes over Times Square.  Yup, right behind the New Year’s Eve ball:

Fairfax photos by Ashley Nichols
Times Square photos by Zack McTee

THE HUNDREDS X THE SEVENTH LETTER :: SABER

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FLIGHT.

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Fresh off an in-studio at Power 106, The Airplane Boys took the DeLorean for a spin this afternoon in downtown Los Angeles for their latest music video. The Toronto hip-hop duo are known for their sharply-crafted films, check out their Youtube channel HERE.

That’s Bon Voyage in the passenger seat:

and Beck Motley at the wheel. Check the fellas out at Coachella in a couple weeks.

by bobbyhundreds

THE HUNDREDS BY DON PENDLETON.

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The Hundreds is pleased to announce the release of The Hundreds by Don Pendleton collection, available tomorrow, Thursday, March 29, 2012 at the The Hundreds flagship locations as well as fine skate shops worldwide.

Don Pendleton is an American graphic and fine artist, and icon in the skateboarding world.  With a culturally influential career spanning decades, Pendleton uses linear organic cubist techniques and expressionism to create messages of the dueling struggle and cohabitation between nature and modern society.  The Hundreds is pleased to team up with such a talented artist whose influences and messages speak to those of the aesthetic and mindset of the brand itself.  He has worked for the likes of Alien Workshop, Element Skateboards, Zero Skateboards, Etnies shoes, and DVS shoes, among many other clients worldwide.

Anytime someone knows my artwork and history and wants to work with me, it’s always an honor.  I have a lot of respect for Ben and Bobby [Hundreds], and how they’ve been able to create something so substantial from the ground up.” – Don Pendleton on the The Hundreds collaboration.

The limited The Hundreds x Don Pendleton collection consists of four different graphic tees, two hooded sweatshirts, a keychain, and snapback featuring Pendleton’s signature artwork.  Pendleton’s graphics are a perfect combination of his widely recognized work, while staying true to the unmistakable design of The Hundreds.  All items were produced in extremely limited quantities and available at The Hundreds flagship locations in addition to skate shops worldwide.

The Adam Tee:

The Owls Tee:

The Party Hat Tee:

The Runnin Tee:

The Owls Hoodie:

The Adam Hoodie:

The Owls Keychain:

The Adam Snapback:

 

SCREEN RESOLUTION.

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The initial few hundred bucks we ever scrapped together from our personal bank accounts, Ben and I put towards screenprinting our first t-shirts. We asked an acquaintance of ours to help us out; he had a small 2-color press in his backyard, so we dropped off a CD of art files and a boxful of blanks.  It was 2003 and we were off to a bright future in apparel.

Or so we thought.  Weeks went by. Then months. Nothing.  Excuses turned into straight-to-voicemail, turned into frustration. We had lost almost an entire summer waiting for our tees, our first accounts had been promised deliveries that were weeks late, and our precious blanks were held hostage in some woodshed in the Valley.

So we showed up on our friend’s doorstep, unannounced, and demanded to see our product.  One by one, he pulled each crumpled t-shirt from the floor mess. The first tee’s graphic was a little too high in placement.  He shrugged, “It’s not so bad,” and picked up another. This time the print was upside down.  A little flustered, he tossed it aside and grabbed the next shirt.  The print was on the wrong side. “There’s always a margin of error,” he justified, “you have to expect a few fuck-ups.”

“Then how do you explain this?,” Ben asked, as he reached down and handed our friend a completely blank t-shirt.  No print anywhere.

And that was that.  15 minutes later we were sitting in the car, doors flung open, staring at the roof with the sun glinting in our eyes. “Our company’s over before we even started,” we wailed in self-pity.  That was everything, all our cash that had gone into the blanks — right down the drain with the ink washed from the screens.

We pulled ourselves together and somehow managed to peddle off a fraction of the t-shirts that were somewhat presentable.  With that money, we faced our next dilemma.  Time to find a new silkscreen printshop.

A friend of Ben’s referred us to a shop she had once used for a project, also deep in the Valley, in fact not too far from the Screenprinting Shop of Horrors that crushed our dreams just a month prior.  We walked into that office on a blind whim with a photocopied linesheet of our next season of offerings. We thought we were sitting on Streetwear gold, but the guys who ran this shop could barely suppress their snickers looking at these misguided 23-year-olds with big dreams and shallow pockets.  ”How many t-shirts are you guys trying to produce?” they entertained us, as the stale cigarette smoke hung in the air.  The sticky carpeted floors caked in soot and old paint, the abused pool table re-appropriated into a makeshift worktable, and the counter actually an old bar top, the “office” was built-out to mimic a dingy watering hole. “I dunno,” we responded, “maybe like a hundred shirts?”  That was about all we could afford to print, and furthermore, about as much as we thought we could sell.

They laughed. This time out loud.  ”Guys, do you know how many kids come in here trying to start a t-shirt line?  We don’t have the charity for that.  Do you know what ‘minimums’ are? We do million-t-shirt orders for the State of California. We don’t have the time to separate your artwork, burn the screens, and run the machines for 100 t-shirts. Go somewhere else.”

But we weren’t going anywhere. I mean, what did we have to lose?  Remember, our company had failed before it had even gotten off the ground.  We had nothing to our name except a few t-shirt sales sprinkled around Los Angeles, mainly to friends of ours anyways.  So we fought for it.  We negotiated a deal that the screenprinters couldn’t refuse (In the end, I think they caved because they either felt sorry for us or wanted to get us out of the way of the baseball game).  So when we were back at that bartop a month later with a re-order, they were amused.

And when we were back again after a few weeks with a brand new catalog of fresh designs, they groaned, but capitulated.  Hell, why not?  It was the slow season. So it went, for months, then years, bickering back and forth about measly sample runs and odd-placement hits, 4-color pocket prints and reds that weren’t quite the right red.. until one day our screenprinters called us and requested a meeting.

As they sat in our conference room, the first time we had seen some of them outside that french-fry-laden bar, they cut to the chase.  It simply did not make sense for us to pay the middleman anymore.  The print shop had gone from tolerating The Hundreds’ trivial jobs to dedicating the vast majority of their business to our odd-placement t-shirts with red prints on colorful pockets.  From a financial perspective, it made way more dollars and sense to take all the machines, screens, ink, and labor and just do the printing ourselves.  ”Buy us out,” they flatly suggested.  It didn’t take much convincing once we considered the quality control benefits, the ability to monitor our work more closely, run extremely limited numbers of t-shirts without having to meet minimums, and best of all, always being on time.

And so we did.  We bought the print shop.

The Hundreds has owned and operated its own screenprinting shop for years now. Aside from ourselves, we actually do a number of private jobs for friends’ labels (yes, competitors) within our industry, although you’d never guess who.  Equipped with a 16-color press, a 12-color, a couple of 10s, and sample stations, it’s like Willy Wonka’s factory but for t-shirt creations.  We’ve always prided ourselves on having the best concepts and artwork, but the key ingredient to our graphic tees is the printing.

Every t-shirt of ours comes with a story.  That’s how we’ve built The Hundreds since day one.

But this is the story where our t-shirts come from.

by bobbyhundreds

ME, MYSELF, AND I.

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Let’s talk about me for a change. Me, me, me.

CCS has posted a Cell Phone Raid with my iPhone pix from SXSW HERE.

And pick up the new issue of FRONT Magazine to see a cross-section of my office here at The Hundreds HeadQuarters. Shot by my lovely friend Natalia Brutalia.

FUNDAY.

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The Hundreds Design team takes the afternoon to work on a big special project to debut later next year.

Kreayshawn wandered aimlessly into my office in her pajamas, then shoved her hand up my mini-me Muppet’s butt and made him speak unmentionable things.

The chill black guys of CBG: Corzillah, Hawaii, and Jay Ughh invade my privacy.

You can catch up with the guys in the fifth episode of Spaghetto’s SXSW recap HERE.

by bobbyhundreds

THSM : THIS SATURDAY NIGHT

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