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FUSShop Stickers
Pack of 6

With so many requests for stickers we have decided to make them available on the site for anyone that wants them!!

Click on the image to see where other people have stuck them including: London, New York, Hong Kong, Thailand, Sweden, Barcelona, Belgium.

Add your home town to the list...

60mm x 60mm, Black & White Vinyl Stickers.

Pack of 6. Peel and Adhere to customise and improve any surface. Phenomenal results in seconds!

Price: FREE (Just pay for P&P)

Disclaimer: PLEASE STICK RESPONSIBLY, only stick them on your own personal property.

 
         
 
 
 
         
 
Sticker History

Here is a brief rundown of the Parody Stickers we have produced so far...
 
Andre Posse   FUSShop Posse  
2007 - FUSShop has a Posse

Andre the Giant Has a Posse is a street art campaign based on a design by Shepard Fairey created in 1986 in Charleston, South Carolina. Distributed by the skater community, the Andre stickers began showing up in nearly every big city across the U.S.A. Later, when Shepard Fairey was a student at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), he released his manifesto.

At the time Fairey declared the campaign to be "an experiment in phenomenology." Over time the artwork has been reused in a number of ways and has become a worldwide movement.
Supreme   Fupreme
2008 - FUpreme NYC

In April 1994, Supreme opened it's doors on Lafayette Street in downtown Manhattan and became the home of New York City Skate Culture. And it's core was a gang of rebellious young New York skaters and artists who became the store's staff, crew and customers.

Supreme grew to be the embodiment of downtown culture, playing an integral part in it's regeneration. skaters, punks, hip-hop heads - the young counter culture at large - all gravitated towards Supreme.
Kaws Kaws
2009 - KUSShop

Kaws began his career as a graffiti artist growing up in Jersey City, New Jersey. Later moving to New York City in the 1990s, KAWS started subverting imagery on billboards, bus shelters and phone booth advertisements. These reworked advertisements were at first left alone, lasting for up to several months, but as KAWS popularity skyrocketed, the ads became increasingly sought after.