sacai and A.P.C. launch quilted third collaboration with Jessica Ogden
sacai and A.P.C.’s third capsule is built around Jessica Ogden’s quilted patchwork, with prices from ¥55,000 to ¥275,000 and a blouson already sold out.

sacai and A.P.C. opened their third collaboration as a 12-piece capsule built around Jessica Ogden’s patchwork quilt language, with both brands selling it through their official online stores. The collection mixes women’s and men’s pieces and gives the drop a crisp, craft-first identity that feels more considered than the usual one-and-done streetwear cameo.
Ogden’s influence is the point. Her quilt work turns archival, handcrafted textiles into prints that sit neatly inside sacai’s hybrid silhouettes, where familiar shapes are sharpened by detail and construction. A Quilts Pullover at ¥132,000, a Quilts Dress at ¥220,000, a Quilts T-Shirt at ¥55,000, a Quilts Knit Pullover at ¥176,000, and Quilts Pants at ¥187,000 make the spread read like a compact wardrobe rather than a logo exercise. The Quilts Blouson, priced at ¥275,000, is already sold out on sacai’s site, a sign that the most fully realized piece in the line also carries the most heat.

A.P.C. has framed the partnership inside its quilt series structure, with a dedicated “Round 23 - A.P.C. Sacai” category page pointing to a collaboration that plugs into a longer numbered run rather than standing alone. That matters because A.P.C., founded in 1987 by Jean Touitou, built its reputation on pared-back French basics and denim, not on splashy, disposable capsules. Bringing sacai into that world, and doing it through Ogden’s textile work, keeps the collaboration additive: each release adds another layer of texture, archive, and technique instead of simply repainting the same formula.


The long history behind the quilts makes the third sacai x A.P.C. drop feel less like a marketing cycle and more like an evolving craft project. A recent A.P.C. quilt product page referred to the 28th edition of Ogden’s A.P.C. quilts, which places the collaboration inside a much larger body of work than the sacai link-up alone. That numbering gives the series a sense of continuity, and it is exactly why the partnership still lands with collectors: the clothes are new, but the language behind them has been building for years.
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