Stone Island
概述
Stone Island — the Italian premium menswear brand that turned a military-inspired compass badge into a global cult symbol, bridging football casual culture and high fashion.
历史时间线
- 1982: Massimo Osti founds Stone Island as an offshoot of C.P. Company
- 1983: Introduces the iconic compass badge patch
- 1990s: Adopted by UK football casuals; becomes subculture uniform
- 1996: Osti sells majority stake; brand changes hands multiple times
- 2008: Carlo Rivetti's Sportswear Company acquires Stone Island
- 2020: Moncler acquires Stone Island for €1.15 billion
- 2023: Revenue surpasses €400M; rapid US and Asian expansion
- 2024: 200+ stores globally; collaborations with New Balance and Supreme
商业模式
Premium menswear with average garment prices of €200-600. Product innovation drives pricing: each collection introduces new fabric treatments, dyeing processes, and technical features. Revenue from direct retail (growing rapidly), wholesale, and e-commerce. The brand's cult following enables full-price selling with minimal discounting — unusual in fashion.
护城河分析
Product innovation: Stone Island's textile laboratory develops proprietary fabrics (reflective treatments, heat-reactive materials, special dyes) that competitors can't easily replicate. Cult status: the compass badge signals membership in a community that spans Italian ultras, UK casuals, and now global fashion enthusiasts. Moncler synergy: shared supply chain and retail expertise post-acquisition.
关键数据
- revenue: €400M+ annually (2023)
- acquisition_price: €1.15 billion by Moncler (2020)
- founder: Massimo Osti (textile engineer and innovator)
- stores: 200+ globally
- headquarters: Ravarino, Italy
有趣事实
- Stone Island's founder Massimo Osti was a self-taught textile innovator who invented garment dyeing techniques that make each piece unique — the brand's research center still holds archives of 60,000+ fabric samples dating to the 1980s
- In the UK, Stone Island jackets became so associated with football hooliganism in the 1990s that wearing the compass badge could get you targeted by police at matches — the brand has since been embraced by everyone from Drake to Italian fashion week