Eagle-embossed biker jackets and dollar-bill bombers prove Supreme finally found a design partner weird enough to match its own chaos.
Supreme has spent the last five years proving it can collaborate with literally anyone, from carmakers to high fashion houses, but rarely does a partnership feel genuinely unhinged. This one does. The Supreme x MM6 Maison Margiela collection arrives as the kind of fever dream that only emerges when an NYC skate brand meets a Belgian designer known for deconstructing luxury into barely-there transparency and conceptual abstraction.
The collection pivots hard on contradiction. Oversized eagle emblems embossed across leather biker jackets sit uncomfortably next to dollar-bill printed bombers, creating a visual language that feels both streetwear maximalist and haute couture absurdist. MM6’s trademark structural chaos and Supreme’s logo-heavy branding don’t smooth into each other; they collide. A stitched hem frays at the edge. A seam runs backwards. The pieces look expensive and broken simultaneously, which is exactly the tension that keeps fashion insiders actually paying attention instead of scrolling past another Kanye collab announcement.
What makes this genuinely interesting isn’t that Supreme finally collaborated with Margiela’s secondary line. It’s that neither side blinked. MM6 could have played it safe, softening its deconstructionist edge for mass appeal. Supreme could have demanded cleaner graphics and simpler silhouettes. Instead, they doubled down on what makes each weird separately, creating something that refuses to be the comfortable middle ground these collabs usually become. The dollar bills feel almost like mockery of hype culture’s obsession with drip. The eagles read as imperial and slightly off, like something you’d see on a counterfeit luxury good or a very expensive Halloween costume.
This is what happens when a brand stops trying to reach everyone and starts making things only a specific type of person will actually want to wear.




