
Bomb Story: Much of streetwear's origins boil down to the graphic T-shirt. The most notable aspect of the art is its roots in parody and commentary. There's a David vs. Goliath attitude that comes with stealing a familiar logo, especially one that's corporate, and tweaking it to serve a new message. Even The Hundreds' ""Bar"" is a take on a football team's typography. Although Andy Warhol wasn't a parody artist per se, his Soup Cans are iconic for interpreting a commercial, manufactured product as painted canvases. In fact, like NFT collectibles, Warhol delivered 32 Soup Cans (one for every flavor) to the dealer Irving Blum in 1962. Not coincidentally, there are 32 Screen Adams, but we only curated a select few for the ABS collectibles.| Background Story: Like the Gradient Camos, after we had felt like we had re-worked camo every which way, the question was how much could we reduce the pattern and still have it be recognizable. No Camo strips the traditional Woodland camo of all its shapes, except for the black forms. The result is very much The Hundreds in its color scheme, as we divide our offerings between pop colors and dark blacks.