Stüssy and Our Legacy Work Shop mark 10th upcycled capsule launch
Vol. 10 turns deadstock into the main event, with hand-reworked pieces split between Los Angeles and Stockholm and staged across four fashion capitals.

Stüssy and Our Legacy Work Shop made Vol. 10 feel less like another capsule and more like a proof-of-concept for how workwear stays sharp: by being remade, not merely released. The collection was reworked by hand in Los Angeles and Stockholm, and the brands leaned into the irregularity. No two pieces are the same, colors may fade or bleed with wear, and limited sizing was part of the proposition from the start.
That process matters because the collaboration has spent the past decade building its own vocabulary around scarcity and reconstruction. The partnership began in August 2020 and has now reached its 10th installment, with earlier drops in January 2023 and January 2024 pushing deadstock denim, upcycled Harris Tweed, reversible shearling outerwear, overdyed cargo pants, Scottish wool knits, and leather accessories. Vol. 10 continues that Stockholm-Los Angeles bridge, but the point is no longer just the geography. It is the chemistry between California streetwear looseness and Swedish design discipline.

The launch landed Wednesday, June 17, on Stüssy.com and in store at Stüssy New York and Stüssy Paris, as well as on OurLegacy.com and in store at Our Legacy Work Shop Stockholm and London. The rollout was backed by retail installations in Stockholm, London, New York, and Paris, a reminder that this is now a global collaboration with the confidence to present workwear as culture, not just clothing.
On the product side, the range stretched well beyond the headline pieces and into the kind of wardrobe fragments that make the collaboration so wearable: tees, hoodies, shirts, trousers, shorts, totes, and accessories. Our Legacy’s shop page put the STÜSSY X OL X CDW VEST at 580 USD, the RANGER JACKET at 620 USD, and the UNCONSTRUCTED DB BLAZER at 590 USD, prices that place the collection firmly in luxury territory without losing the rough-edged usefulness that keeps Stüssy relevant.
That balance is the reason Vol. 10 lands. The best pieces in this collaboration do not try to clean up workwear. They keep the patina, the looseness, and the sense that each garment has already lived a little, which is exactly what makes the series feel fresh after ten chapters.
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