With everything else thatâs occurred in the world of Kanye West since last June, itâd be understandable if youâd forgotten about his upcoming collaboration with Gap altogether. After all, it was followed by a failed presidential run, a multibillion-dollar evaluation, a documentary announcement, a divorce announcement, a disgruntled former protĂ©gĂ© and a multimillion-dollar lawsuit by a literal chorus of disgruntled former employees.
But apparently, none of the above has affected sales of Yeâs luxe sportswear line Yeezyâor deterred Gap from betting on the rapper to revive its own flagging sales and brand identity. This week, the retailer announced that the 10-year collaboration, which boasts Nigerian-British female designer Mowalola Ogunlesi as its design director, will debut almost a year to the date of its initial announcement, hitting stores in late June. As Business of Fashion reported, âGap desperately needs this collaboration to succeed. Itâs closed stores, sold brands and cut costs, but that alone wonât begin to reverse two decades of declining sales and fading cultural relevance.â
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Yeezy is a big, big swing at putting Gap back in the fashion conversation, and the company hasnât been coy about the lineâs importance to the brandâs future. The company expects revenue from the line to top $150 million in 2022, its first full year, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg. That projection is, if anything, conservative: Adidas sold $1.7 billion in Yeezy sneakers last year, according to Bloomberg.
As Bloomberg further notes, Yeezy itself has been valued at $3.2 billion to $4.7 billion by UBS Group AG, a dollar amount which memorably threw off Forbesâ valuation of Kanyeâs personal worth earlier this year. âThe value of the new Gap tie-up, which will hit stores this summer, could be worth as much as $970 million of that total, the bank estimated,â Bloomberg reports.
Without the prohibitive price point attached to Yeezyâs existing line, no doubt the collaboration will prove immensely successfulâthough the jury is still out on whether that boon will benefit Gapâs core collection, as well. If not, it may prove even more fortuitous for the rapper, who not only worked at a Gap during his high school years in Chicago, but told Vogue during a 2015 interview (h/t Page Six):
âOne of my dreams was to be the head creative director of the Gap. Iâd like to be the Steve Jobs of the Gap ⊠Iâm not talking about a capsule. Iâm talking about full ⊠creative control of the Gap is what I would like to do.â
With that in mind, Gap may end up a devil in a new dress.
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