
"Yo mother suckers! Get funky. Self express." We were kind of surprised to see New Zealand-based Phil & Teds going urban with their new Graffiti line. Do Kiwis have the street cred to pull this off? Vote below the jump.

"Yo mother suckers! Get funky. Self express." We were kind of surprised to see New Zealand-based Phil & Teds going urban with their new Graffiti line. Do Kiwis have the street cred to pull this off? Vote below the jump.
Comments (7)
I think its creative and there isn't much out there for rock-n-roll wannabe parents who have all boys or hard core girls. I appreciate that they are providing another option.
Would I buy something from this line? No.
Because I'm not so much rock-n-roll as wannabe hipster.
Interesting! I'm not quite sure who this is marketed to.
You have obviously never been to New Zealand we have a pretty strong hip hop culture here in the Maori and Pacific Island community.
In instances where the fabric is used as an accent (the stoller, espeically) I think it works well, and is a nice change of pace from the standard prints.
I think it looks good on the stroller as just a pad accent..but I'm not so fond of the items with the all-over print, like the travel bed. A bit too loud for me.
wow, I am from the town Phil and Teds are based in, and it definitely doesn't seem like something 'hipsters' would use... sorry, but it's kinda trashy looking to me, even moreso in the red black and white.
I have one in blue but i got it because it was cheaper than buying the stroller and doubles kit separately. All the graffiti strollers come with the second seat as a set.