
As soon as we arrived at the Obey sale on Saturday in Santa Ana I told my friend, "fuck this, I'm out." The line was longer than anything I'd seen outside Magic Mountain.
All you could see were high school and college-aged kids in hoodies and tapered jeans messaging their friends and they were probably saying the same thing I was saying, "fuck this." But my friend was determined. She had Christmas shopping to do and she had just gotten an Obey sweater for her brother for $70, she figured if she could get inside the warehouse she could probably get her entire family tshirts and sweaters for the price of that one item, and maybe get herself something cool as well.
So she pointed me to a taco truck, I got some grub, and we stood in the line like the kool kids and we waited.
And we waited.
And boy did we wait.

The big problem is I love Shepard Fairey and pretty much everything that he does. Sure his work has become a little popular now, but so what? In fact it's about time that some cool things have hit the mainstream.
The other problem is I have terrible taste in clothing, and I have no patience shopping. So since my fashion-forward friend was with me I figured that it would be a good place to stock up on clothes that I would wear for the next year.

This was not the first time that Obey has had a sample sale. Indeed, this was their third such sale that I had attended. The other two, however, were real easy deals: you get there, you park, you stand in a very short line, you get in the warehouse, you take your time, and you ended up with $20 shirts for $5 and $100 jackets for $40.
Those deals were gone. This year people who showed up at 6am were just leaving the building at 11am. And because of the huge crowds, Obey had a system where right before you were allowed in, you were given a sticker slapped on you that had a time on it. The time was 30 minutes after you were to be let in. So as you shopped you could hear the dj say "ok, 2:15ers, you have two more minutes till you have to get out!"
Not the friendliest situation, but it kept the line going, and kept people focused. Little did you realize how fast 30 minutes could fly by.

From all accounts, people had camped out on Thursday night (in the rain) and slept in tents. Then Friday night more people camped out, and many arrived around 6am. This caused lines that stretched way out of the parking lot and down the street of the industrial park.
When we arrived at 11am we asked the people exiting how long they predicted our wait was going to be, and they said, "wow, you're lucky, you should only have to wait two hours." Sadly they were wrong, we had a three-hour wait.
But once inside, to our amazement, there was still a good variety of designs to choose from, be they jackets or thermals, or tshirts. If you bought four shirts you got them for $8 each, hoodies were $35, and beanies were $10. Not bad prices. And it didn't stop anyone from getting at least a half dozen items.

Checking out I asked the guy who seemed to be a manager how many people he thought had made it to the check out stand and he said, "On Thursday I printed out 3,500 of these [order sheets]. I had to make more copies today." Everyone who bought anything had one order sheet. So I said, "so 5,000 people came here so far?" He said, a little less than that. Maybe 4,000.
Was it worth it? I think so. The booty in the photo above cost me $160 out the door. That accounts for an embroidered hoodie, a nice thermal, a beanie, and several shirts.
Will I go next year? Probably not. They organized this as well as could be imagined. The 30 minute limit was brilliant. The selection was decent, the prices were reasonable, but my weekends are valuable. If they spread this sucker out to a three-day affair that might cut down on the crazy lines - but who knows, it might just mean that it's three days of mayhem instead of two.
Either way, I'm happy that people were waiting in line for good stuff instead of the new Puff Daddy cd or something.
My only real tip that I'd give Obey is that they should consider getting a stage set up in the parking lot. I don't know of any band who wouldn't love to rock out to an audience of young people WHO CANT LEAVE. In fact they would probably play for free.
Photos by Tony Pierce / LAist




Sounds like the American Apparel Flea Market. A 1pm arrival (they opened at noon) was a three and a half hour wait to get in. At least they had bands, DJs, food and beer -- it did help the waiting pass a bit more quickly.
Wow. Thats a $hit-ton of people...
Can you imagine the bucks that company made?
CASH only right?
tsayum.
nope they took plastic too
andre the giant has some bidness skillz
people that support obey are clueless consumers.
every good idea obey has had was stolen from eric brunneti of FUCT.
go here to get the details...
http://www.brghtnghts.com/blog/?page_id=33
Obey has pumped out a zillion compositions in the last decade... so what if 10 are similar?
And I guarantee you that the Fuct founder would sell his own balls to have a tent-sale as bonkers as Shep's.
Everybody likes money, bruh... expecially the cats who start companies.
Wow...that was kinda freaky that everyone in the photos are dressed exactly the same. You must really love this company because you couldn't pay me to spend more than 30 min. in Santa Ana and I've had to do it for work more times that I want to count. LOL...in fact, I have to do it tomorrow, but I should be in and out in 15 min. HAHAHAHA
Let's just say Obey is the sheep dog and you guess what all those other people including the author of this post is.....
I love it so much that you didn't bother making the bed before taking this photo.
Waiting and long lines seem to be the general theme for the warehouse sales over the weekend. The Hundreds had one with a huge line and a couple/three hour wait. They had a ticketing system that worked out well. I guess if you are patient you can get some really good deals. Cool post!