Houston Chronicle

Bad Bunny fans snap up limited-edition Crocs.

- By Sandra E. Garcia and Jonah Engel Bromwich

A special-edition pair of Crocs released in collaborat­ion with Latin pop star Bad Bunny went on sale last Tuesday at noon. Within 16minutes, they were sold out.

The Bad Bunny Crocs, adorned with glow-in-the-dark versions of the brand’s proprietar­y Jibbitz charms and Bad Bunny’s logo, were the latest in a series of highly anticipate­d, quick-to-sell-out collaborat­ions between the famously comfortabl­e foam clogs and a well-knownmusic­al artist.

Designs the company created with the Grateful Dead and Post Malone — a serial Crocs collaborat­or — all sold out within an hour. Other recent Crocs collaborat­ions, including one with Kentucky Fried Chicken, have been similarly popular.

Hours after the Bad Bunny launch, the lowest price at which the shoes could be purchased on resale site StockX was $265. Hours earlier, they retailed for $64.99.

Danny Morales, 26, from Rialto, Calif., tried to buy the Crocs with three separate devices, only to find out that they were unavailabl­e.

“I was shocked,” he said. “I really wanted those, too.” He already had a pair of Crocs, he said, “but these were Bad Bunny’s. Who wouldn’t want anything he puts out?”

Crocs has been gaining ground for the past five years, but it has had a banner 2020. At a time when U.S. retail sales of footwear are down 20 percent so far this year when compared to the same period in 2019, sales of Crocs are up 48 percent, according to Matt Powell, an analyst at the NPD Group, amarket research firm.

“Under the pandemic, frankly anything that you could call ‘comfortabl­e’ has done well,” Powell said. “The slipper business is one of the few other footwear categories that’s up under COVID.”

Bad Bunny, a Puerto Rican trap star, released his second major studio album, “YHLQMDLG,” this year. It quickly became the highest-charting all-Spanish-language album ever, according to Bill-board, and broke several sales records.

He has also become notable for his out-there look, which toggles between Caribbean dad-core and designer streetwear, and become a go-to magazine cover star.

Michelle Poole, the newly appointed president of Crocs, said that Bad Bunny embodied the “come as you are” attitude that Crocs is always looking to sell.

“He’s got a very daring style, a very unapologet­ic attitude, and he’s also someone who loves Crocs,” she said. “He’s been spotted wearing Crocs in live performanc­es and inmusic videos.”

“I am always trying to be comfortabl­e,” Bad Bunny said by email when asked about the collaborat­ion. “It isn’t something that I suddenly decided to do, be comfortabl­e. It’s something I’ve done my whole life. I always like to feel good with what I have on.”

He added that he was happy that the shoe had been so popular and clarified that his favorite Crocs colors are yellow and green.

“WOW they were SOLD OUT in like 15minutes I think,” he wrote. “FELIZ.”

The idea for the collaborat­ion originated with Pedro Rodriguez, 33, a merchandis­ing manager at Crocs and a Bad Bunny fan, originally from Puerto Rico. Conversati­ons with the artist started in 2019.

Crocs has had notable collaborat­ions with other brands since 2017, when it helped Balenciaga send its models down the runway in the foam clogs. Its string of memorable collaborat­ions with musicians kicked off the following year with the first set of Post Malone shoes.

“Post was the first really broad collaborat­ion that everyone was talking about,” Poole said. “He’s the marmite. People love or hate him.” (Poole, who grew up outside of London, was referring to the deep brown vegetable extract that British people inexplicab­ly love.)

“Crocs is marmite as well, so we like pairing up with other marmite brands,” she added.

Collaborat­ions have become a fashion staple over the last decade. Pioneered by streetwear brand Supreme, which broke ground by working with fine artists, including George Condo and Takashi Murakami, such collaborat­ions pile fan bases on top of each other, creating a built-in demographi­c for what is often limited-edition merchandis­e.

“Ten years ago it wasn’t common,” said Angelo Baque, head of clothing line Awake NY and former creative director of Supreme. “Now, if you go on Hypebeast, there’s 40 collaborat­ions to announce a day. I think that everything is fair game in terms of collaborat­ion. I don’t think there's anything that’s sacred. ”To fans of Bad Bunny, the near-instantane­ous unavailabi­lity of the new Crocs felt like sacrilege. By last Tuesday evening, more than 1,300 people had signed a petition asking that more of the shoes be released and blaming “bots,” software programmed to speed-buy limited merchandis­e, for snapping up all the wares. (A spokeswoma­n for Crocs, Melissa Layton, said that bots are on the brand’s radar and that the company is “doing everything we can to mitigate that bot action.”)

Mariela Benavides was one of those who signed the petition, writing, “I’m signing this because the bots did me dirty. I just wanted to vibe withmy crocs, man.”

Poole said that it was possible that another run of the limitededi­tion shoes would be released.

“It’s certainly something that isn’t off the table if there’s appetite,” she said. “That said, what we want to do is have the feeling for our customers that they’ve captured something that’s really valuable. And if you over-distribute anything it loses its value, so it’s really about finding the right balance.”

 ?? Courtesy photo ?? A collaborat­ion between Bad Bunny and Crocs has driven sales of the foam clogs to new heights.
Courtesy photo A collaborat­ion between Bad Bunny and Crocs has driven sales of the foam clogs to new heights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States