Justin Bieber’s SKYLRK drops workwear-inspired Made in USA pieces
SKYLRK went harder on construction than branding, with Made in USA pants, reverse fleece, and custom rivets that push Bieber’s label into workwear territory.

Justin Bieber’s SKYLRK just made its cleanest case yet for being taken seriously as workwear-adjacent product, not just celebrity merch with a mood board. The June 11 drop landed with seven Made in USA pieces and a lineup that leaned into structure, utility, and fabric choice: a skull cap, hoodie, waffle longsleeve, two pant styles, a low-profile sneaker, and a two-pair sock set.
The sharpest piece in the mix was the Batwing Hoodie, which came in reverse fleece with a cropped silhouette and raglan sleeves. That combo matters because it gives the hoodie shape, not just comfort. It reads less like a logo hoodie and more like something trying to earn its bulk through cut and texture, which is exactly where a lot of celebrity brands fall apart. SKYLRK at least understands that workwear energy lives in the build.

The Painter Pant is the real test. It was made from 100% cotton and finished with custom rivets, an adjustable drawcord waist, and a leather back tab. Those are the right signals: metal hardware, a tougher hand, a nod to old-school painter and carpenter pants. But the proof is in whether the pant has the kind of stitching, pocketing, and abrasion-ready heft people actually expect from workwear, or just the language of it. On paper, SKYLRK is aiming at the right references.
The other pant, the Swoop Waffle Pant, pushed the collection into coordinated loungewear territory without losing the utility read. The waffle longsleeve added tonal embroidery and spray-painted detailing, while the pants brought side pockets and hem adjusters that let the silhouette shift between straight and tapered. That makes the set feel more considered than novelty-driven. Even the Skull Cap kept the theme tight with ribbed knit construction and a raw hem.
Footwear gave the drop its widest reach. The Matterdaddies sneaker used a low-profile, soccer-inspired shape with a mesh upper, RPU outer cage, padded collar, and heel pull tab. It sold out fast too, with the first two colorways moving in under 10 minutes and Bieber later saying they were gone in 9. SKYLRK has been building this kind of heat through scarcity, from a March 1 birthday collection that included hoodies, sweatpants, and the boxers Bieber wore during his 2026 Grammy performance. The label is clearly getting attention. The harder part is making sure the workwear details keep meaning something after the drop frenzy cools off.
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