Problem: "We can't launch looking like everyone else."
CUERO STREET wasn't just selling clothes. They were launching a movement — one rooted in Black resilience, street legacy, and modern rebellion. They didn't want screen prints or generic patches.
They needed statement pieces. The kind of detail that stops someone in the street and makes them ask, "Where'd you get that?"
We didn't sell them patches. We helped build a uniform for street culture:
Everything was produced, proofed, and shipped in 10 days, ahead of their drop.
"The patches made the collection. Everyone kept asking who did them."