Wear They At?
Rapper clothing lines that haven't panned out.
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Not So Custom Fit - Not every rapper can make a Sean John, Roc-A-Wear, or a G-Unit brand, but it hasn't stopped most from trying. We recall some notable hip hop stars who tried their hand at fashion, but learned the fashion world wasn't the right fit for them.
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Snoop Dogg's Rich & Infamous - Launched in the summer of 2008, Snoop Dogg launched a menswear line, Rich & Infamous. But by 2010, the company shut down, with Snoop telling reporters, "The recession is effecting everybody."(Photo: Bruce Gifford/FilmMagic)
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Outkast's Outkast Clothing Co. - Promise of Andre 3000's turban and fur Afrika Bambaataa looks never surfaced in Outkast's 2002 clothing line. And when the duo was never pictured wearing the uninspired wares, interest in the brand quickly fizzled.(Photo: Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)
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Tupac's Makaveli - Started by the late rapper/actor's mother Afeni Shakur, Makaveli Clothing was a tribute to Tupac's legacy. The line launched in 2003, seven years after Pac's death and is still available online. The line has yet to be as popular as the star himself.(Photo: REUTERS/Mike Segar/Landov)
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Jim Jones' Nostic - This Christian Audiger-esque line of menswear replaced the Dipset's signature throwback jerseys and flossed bedazzled skull and cross bone designs in 2007. But when Jimmy struck gold with "Baallin'" Nostic fell to the wayside.(Photo: Nostic by Jim Jones)
Photo By Photo: Nostic by Jim Jones
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