Off-White is breathing new life into one By Virgil Abloh most important ideas under a new name. The brand has launched L/AB c/o, a sub-label designed to continue the accessible spirit of Abloh’s retired ‘Off-White For All’ concept while introducing its own identity. The debut collection features apparel and sneakers built around Off-White’s established industrial aesthetic, including the brand’s diagonal stripe motif, typographic prints and signature quotes.
What sets L/AB c/o apart from the main line is the pricing structure. Every piece in the initial release, from t-shirts to sneakers, costs well under $200 USD, making it the most accessible entry into Off-White’s design language since Abloh’s original accessible imprint was discontinued.
The label’s positioning is explained directly on the newly launched Instagram page. “If Off-White defines the gray area between black and white, L/AB is another shade within that spectrum, a new space for experiment, evolution and play.” That setup sees L/AB c/o not as a discount version of Off-White, but as a true extension of the brand’s conceptual identity, built specifically around accessibility for younger consumers who may not yet have the purchasing power to engage with the main collection. The first release is now available via the L/AB c/o webpage on Off-White’s official site.
What the collection includes
The debut range includes well-known Off-White categories, executed at a lower price point. T-shirts and jackets carry the brand’s recognizable design vocabulary, while sneakers complete the collection as standout pieces given Off-White’s history of sought-after footwear collaborations and original designs. The diagonal industrial stripes and typographic details that have defined Off-White since its early collections are present throughout, making L/AB c/o read as a clear continuation of the established visual identity rather than a watered-down approach to it.
According to WWD, the re-emergence of this accessible sub-label is supported by campaigns in which JT, GlaifAnd PZ, Vivian Jenna Wilson, Julez Smith, Mazzy JoyaAnd Jay Guapo. This selection of younger cultural figures reinforces the label’s stated intention to reach a target audience that the original “Off-White For All” concept was also built around. The campaign casting indicates that L/AB c/o is being positioned as a true youth-oriented arm of the brand, rather than a silent initiative.
Shop some pieces from the collection
Continuing Virgil Abloh’s original vision

The ‘Off-White For All’ concept was one of Abloh’s clearest expressions of his broader design philosophy: that high design should not be permanently hidden behind high prices. Abloh frequently spoke throughout his career about wanting to make quality design accessible to a younger audience who shaped culture but did not always have access to the prizes that culture commanded. The original accessible label has since been retired, and L/AB c/o seems built to continue that specific mission under a new brand name, while the main Off-White line continues to operate at its established price point.

For longtime followers of the brand, the launch of L/AB c/o raises a reasonable question about its creative direction and continuity following Abloh’s death in 2021. What the debut collection suggests is that Off-White’s current team understands which parts of Abloh’s vision were structurally important to retain. An accessible sublabel has never been a side project for Abloh. It was a direct expression of his strong belief that design culture should not be available exclusively to those who can already afford the main collection, and by reviving that idea under L/AB c/o, that specific piece of his philosophy remains active within the brand.
Featured image: Off-White L/AB c/o

