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Product Description
Based in New York City, Qilo Headwear was founded by a pair of college friends who shared a love for five-panel caps. It launched with a single design: a five-panel cap with an allover pineapple print Read More
Got e mail confirmation on my hat order with a photo of my order-I wanted the suede hat with the Japanese writing and the red stripe-the hat shown in the e mail was white pineapple logo-can you help me out? Thanks
IMHO...They should get rid of the silly Pineapple logo!
People will start asking me if I work for Dole if I wear one.
They need to use a cooler, badder, and more memorable logo like those which follow below:
Msilverhammerfunny you say that - after 3 years of the pineapple logo caps selling strong, we will be cutting down the quantity of cap styles for future seasons and shifting the focus to more "QILO" branded caps and no-logo (pure design) caps.
Yeah, I clicked through to get the pineapple camo cap depicted in the email advertising but it is not even listed.
I am a long-standing consumer of your offers. If you don’t want your new, shortened name to become another 4-letter word, I suggest y’all review your “invitations” at least as attentively as you curate the products on offer.
”Drop” could as easily become short for “droppings” if you aren’t more careful.
Oh boy--I'm wear'n one of these Pineapple hats to the next Trump rally! I'm gonna to tell 'em the Pineapple is the secret symbol of the Deep State--and we're all coming for them!
Well agreed, it's just my main point was that the reason they'd partner with a company like Qilo is that their future is less certain than a company like Chrome Industries, which has a pretty established brand image and target demographic (I think). The 'fashion investment' has more potential for their customers the smaller the brand.
But I mostly used your comment as a platform for my thoughts about people who kind of baselessly hate on the 'fashion' clothing that Drop offers.
If shitty clothes keep popping up, it's not because Drop is malicious and meditates on how best to screw their customers. It's because the number of people likely to buy them makes up for the initial product investment or because the profit margin is so high that it's a relatively low-risk investment for them (especially if they're hanging on to the left-over product). The blame is then on the people who use this website without knowing anything about fashion (which is perfectly fine) or value in clothing (which is also fine but this is more of a social than individual issue). It seems that Drop's goal is growing a platform for everybody to use, but that their current struggle is a marketing strategy that seems to focus more on specific communities, especially communities with lots of gatekeeping.
But I hope Drop is reading this bc I'd definitely be on board with some Chrome Industries drops...
Do you figure that one of the flat brim models could be made to have a rounded bill? Perhaps, if I stuck it in a cup/glass for a while? I know it sounds funny, but I'm being serious :p thank you!