Bomb Story: Much of The Hundreds' design inspiration pulls from '80s and '90s culture. The video games we played growing up employed 8-bit graphics, which had a maximum capacity of 256 colors. Soon after, the Sega Genesis and Turbo Grafx 16 consoles upped the graphics power to 16-bit, then 32-bit and so on. This one is an homage to the blocky pixel art that defined characters like Sonic the Hedgehog and Toejam & Earl. A throwback to simpler times and a reminder that while everything has changed, nothing has changed.| Background Story: Although brought to the modern stage by Dakis Joannou's mega ""Guilty"" yacht designed by Jeff Koons and Ivana Porfiri, the pattern that inspired Disrupt is actually the British Navy's Dazzle camouflage from World War 1. Instead of designing a camouflage that would hide a ship, Dazzle was invented to confuse its observers from knowing which direction the boat was moving. Sometimes, I feel like our entire brand is cloaked in the Disrput pattern. We're not really sure which way we're going, but we're always keeping our enemies on their toes!
#9982
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
- Sales
- Transfers
#9982
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Bomb Story: Much of The Hundreds' design inspiration pulls from '80s and '90s culture. The video games we played growing up employed 8-bit graphics, which had a maximum capacity of 256 colors. Soon after, the Sega Genesis and Turbo Grafx 16 consoles upped the graphics power to 16-bit, then 32-bit and so on. This one is an homage to the blocky pixel art that defined characters like Sonic the Hedgehog and Toejam & Earl. A throwback to simpler times and a reminder that while everything has changed, nothing has changed.| Background Story: Although brought to the modern stage by Dakis Joannou's mega ""Guilty"" yacht designed by Jeff Koons and Ivana Porfiri, the pattern that inspired Disrupt is actually the British Navy's Dazzle camouflage from World War 1. Instead of designing a camouflage that would hide a ship, Dazzle was invented to confuse its observers from knowing which direction the boat was moving. Sometimes, I feel like our entire brand is cloaked in the Disrput pattern. We're not really sure which way we're going, but we're always keeping our enemies on their toes!
- Sales
- Transfers