Supreme’s SS26 Lookbook Debuts Branded Steel Casket in Week One Drop
Supreme’s Week 1 SS26 drop included a 20-gauge, high‑gloss red branded steel casket with leopard faux‑fur interior; the collection went live Feb. 26 in stores and online by region.

A 20‑gauge, high‑gloss red Supreme‑branded steel casket debuted in Supreme’s Spring/Summer 2026 Week 1 drop, which went live Feb. 26 in store and online by region. The lookbook for the collection was previewed Feb. 23, and the casket stood out among apparel and spectacle items announced for the initial release.
Mechanical details published across coverage give the piece heavy, industrial specifications: 84 x 29 x 23 inches, 180 pounds, and an adjustable internal bed with reinforced stationary handles. The exterior is finished in high‑gloss paint with a painted Supreme logo on the lid, while the interior is lined in leopard faux‑fur. Reports also list sculpted steel hardware and chrome handles, a full rubber gasket and lock, and note the casket is made in the USA.
Coverage varies on the manufacturing credit; some outlets call the collaborator Titan Orion, others use Titan Orient or simply Titan. That naming discrepancy appears in the initial writeups alongside the product images and should be noted when locating official product copy or labels.
The casket did not appear alone. Week 1’s accessories lineup ranges from the GenMega G2500 ATM complete with a steel vault and wireless router to a competition‑grade 20‑foot Everlast boxing ring wrapped in Supreme insignia. Other oddities include a Dualit stainless‑steel four‑slice toaster handmade in England, a Teenage Engineering EP‑133 sampler preloaded and logo stamped, a Minolta waterproof 4K camcorder, Bug‑A‑Salt 3.0 pest control devices, and Jacob & Co. diamond pendant entries. Apparel highlights in the lookbook include Supreme/Vanson leather Spider‑Man jackets and matching shorts, Misfits zip‑up hooded sweaters, Playboy‑branded hooded flight jackets, and a Captain Tsubasa x Umbro collaboration.
The casket has been framed by several outlets as an extension of Supreme’s long practice of turning mundane objects into branded collectibles. One writeup put it bluntly: "The formula is simple but potent: take an object no one expects, apply the logo, and let the internet do the rest." Complex captured the tonal angle with its line, "Death, it seems, doesn't have to be without some hype of its own," and Highsnobiety called the casket "the wildest thing we’ve seen from Supreme since, maybe, the brick," placing the piece in the brand’s canon of stunt‑like drops from bricks to pinball machines.
Notably absent from early coverage are retail price, production run, SKU details, and any verified sell‑through metrics; none of the initial reports provide a price or confirm that Week 1 items sold out. Complex’s image captions and editorial frames describe a red casket with a white logo, chrome handles, and a glossy finish, but resale listings and official Supreme product pages will be the next indicators of how collectors and the market respond to a casket as fashion statement.
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