Collection: COMME des GARÇONS

Founded in Tokyo in 1969 by Rei Kawakubo, Comme des Garçons redefined fashion through deconstruction, asymmetry, and a radical approach to form. Across decades, the house has challenged conventions with unfinished hems, unexpected volumes, and experimental textiles that blur the line between garment and idea. Within the archive, key sub-lines trace distinct facets of this vision: Homme Plus (conceptual menswear and runway tailoring), Shirt (graphic, reworked classics), and Tricot (innovative knitwear with sculptural drape). Each offers a different entry point into the CDG universe while sharing the same spirit of intellectual design.
Collectors prize Comme des Garçons archive pieces for their cultural impact and enduring relevance—sharp jackets with displaced seams, re-engineered shirts, pleated and padded constructions, and outerwear that mixes utility with artful distortion. The brand’s collaborations—spanning Nike, Converse, Salomon, and others—extend this language into footwear and performance-adjacent design, creating objects that move easily between street, runway, and gallery.
Whether early avant-garde silhouettes or later experiments, CDG archives embody a vocabulary of concept, utility, and provocation. These are clothes built to question, not just to decorate—designs that remain collectible because they continue to influence how we think about structure, movement, and the everyday uniform. Keywords: Comme des Garçons archive, CDG Homme Plus, CDG Shirt, Tricot, deconstructed tailoring, rare runway pieces, collectible collaborations.