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Supreme Takes “Rest in Peace” Literally With Steel Casket Release

Supreme RIP Casket is here!
ShreddER February 26, 2026
Supreme Casket
@Instagram.com/supremenewyork

New York City fashion skateboarding brand Supreme just gave fans a first look at its Spring/Summer 2026 collection, and as usual, the accessories are getting just as much attention as the clothes.

Alongside tees, outerwear, and skate gear, Supreme revealed something no one really had on their checklist: a Supreme branded steel casket.

Yes, an actual full size casket.

The piece was created in collaboration with Titan Casket and comes finished in steel with a custom leopard faux fur interior.

The inside features an adjustable bed and reinforced stationary handles, and the whole thing weighs in at around 180 pounds.

It is functional, not a prop, and carries the same red box logo that has appeared on everything from bricks to toolboxes over the years.

The release fits right into Supreme’s long running tradition of offbeat lifestyle items. Over the decades, the brand has put its logo on everyday objects, home goods, and items that feel intentionally random.

A casket, though, takes that concept to another level. It turns a product tied to finality into something collectible, branded, and instantly recognizable.

The casket will be available along with the rest of the Spring/Summer 2026 collection in stores and online this Thursday, Feb. 26. Like most Supreme accessories, it is expected to be limited.

Supreme also shared a campaign image with the caption:

“Kembra Pfahler photographed by Heji Shin for Supreme®/Titan Casket®”

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Supreme (@supremenewyork)

The photo features artist Kembra Pfahler shot by Heji Shin, tying the release into the brand’s ongoing relationship with artists and underground culture figures.

Reactions online range from people calling it dark humor to others seeing it as classic Supreme irony.

Some view it as commentary on hype culture and the idea that even something as final as death can be turned into a branded product.

Others simply see it as another rare collectible that will likely resell for far more than retail.

Love it or hate it, Supreme once again found a way to make a single accessory dominate the conversation around an entire seasonal drop.

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