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      • By the time he was nineteen, Jebbia had left England and was a sales assistant at a SoHo store called Parachute. From there, he worked a table at the nearby flea market, then founded a store, Union, on Spring Street that sold British goods and streetwear.
      www.vogue.com › article › history-of-supreme-skate-clothing-brand
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  2. Aug 10, 2017 · Union did well enough until it began to sell clothing designed by Shawn Stüssy, the skateboarder and surfer, at which point it did great. Next, Jebbia helped run a shop with Stüssy until...

  3. Nov 21, 2012 · Opened in 1994 by its press-shy founder, James Jebbia, the Lafayette Street store pioneered an art-gallery-cum-storage-facility chic, with its white walls and plywood shelving. The Container...

  4. Apr 22, 2024 · The book drops on April 25 and will retail for $200. As Supreme enters its next decade, Jebbia is determined to keep making T-shirts that reflect the vision he began developing in 1994.

    • Samuel Hine
  5. Apr 1, 2020 · Jebbia had experience curating and selling clothing through running the Union and Stussy stores in New York, which opened in 1989 and 1991, respectively, but he needed a design team to make...

    • Lei Takanashi
    • Buzzfeed Staff
  6. Jul 24, 2019 · Jebbia never knew what was going to move. Of course, just about everything did: “We'd actually have some seasons where we were sold out of the summer product at the end of March.

  7. Aug 10, 2017 · Since starting Supreme in 1994, founder James Jebbia doesn’t think of the brand in the way most people in fashion might, as it began in a small store on Lafayette Street and has since turned to a...

  8. Jul 26, 2019 · GQ: When it came time for Supreme to really start making clothes—my understanding is that this happened when the stores in Japan opened, and you needed more stuff to sell—what were the ...

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