The best Filipino streetwear brand just dropped its Spring/Summer 2026 collection, and it’s built on culture, not trends

The best Filipino streetwear brand just dropped its Spring/Summer 2026 collection, and it's built on culture, not trends
Henny & Lumpia launches seven new designs rooted in Filipino American identity, with a release party on June 20th at Quickly Benicia and a Manny Pacquiao tee dropping right before the rematch everybody is talking about.

Henny & Lumpia brings the best Filipino streetwear out of the Bay Area with a Spring/Summer 2026 collection that hits on humor, history, and Filipino pride. All made in the Bay Area by Filipinos, all unisex and true to size. Drop 1 is live now. Drop 2 releases June 20th online and in person in Benicia, CA. Use code SPRING26 for 20% off through June 30, 2026.

Henny & Lumpia, one of the most talked-about Filipino American clothing brands to come out of Northern California, just launched its Spring/Summer 2026 collection. Seven designs. All made in the Bay Area by Filipinos. Every one of them is rooted in the culture the brand has been building since day one.

This is not a trend play. Paul Andre and Lloyd de Vera built this brand from scratch without investors or a blueprint, starting with Filthy Dripped, the first Filipino-owned hip hop streetwear brand out of the Bay. Henny & Lumpia is the next chapter: Filipino streetwear that says something true about who you are, designed for Filipino Americans who grew up between two worlds and stopped apologizing for either one.

Drop 1 is live now. Drop 2 hits on June 20th at the official release party.

The Spring/Summer 2026 designs

The collection spans humor, history, and pride. Sometimes all three on the same shirt.

  • The Gago Tee takes one of the most recognizable words in Filipino households and dresses it in luxury brand aesthetics. Gago means silly. Every Filipino knows it. Nobody outside the culture does. That gap is exactly the point.

  • The Kili-Kili Power Tee is a full championship crest dedicated to the Filipino obsession with underarm care. Shot in an actual deodorant aisle. No further explanation needed.

  • The Filipino Strength Female Warrior Tee puts a Filipino woman in the center frame: a plastic bag of drinks in one hand, a bolo knife in the other, flames behind her because that’s what Filipino strength actually looks like.

  • The Lake Tabo Tee gives the humble bathroom dipper a National Park badge treatment. Non-Filipinos think it’s a nature shirt. Filipinos lose it at checkout.

  • The Kambing GOAT Tee plays the joke in both languages. Kambing means goat. Greatest of All Time. Shot on a Bay Area farm with real kambing in the background.

  • The All Pride Tee wraps the Philippine sun, cross, and bamboo in old English script. Filipino pride in a format the whole block respects.

  • The Filipino Strength Manny Pacquiao Tee is the one people have been asking for.

The Manny Pacquiao tee drops at the right time

With Pacquiao vs. Mayweather 2 building buzz, the timing is not an accident.

The Filipino Strength Manny Pacquiao Tee is a tribute to the man who made every Filipino family stop what they were doing on fight night. He came from nothing in General Santos and became the only boxer in history to win world titles in eight different weight classes. Every Filipino felt those wins personally. Not as fans, but as a community that saw itself reflected in someone the whole world was watching.

The design puts him in a Vegas fight night setting, belt raised, Henny in the mix, “Greatest of All Time” across the bottom. It is not subtle. It is not supposed to be.

This is the Manny Pacquiao shirt for Filipino Americans who want to rep the GOAT before the rematch.

Filipino streetwear is built on Filipino culture

The brand’s approach to Filipino streetwear is direct. No filters. No watering down.

Paul Andre and Lloyd grew up Filipino American in the Bay Area. The kind of upbringing where your grandma’s cooking was the best thing on the block, but nobody outside your house knew what arroz caldo was. You were proud of where you came from, but the surrounding culture rarely made space for it.

That gap drove Filthy Dripped. It drives Henny & Lumpia. The brand name itself comes from two things that show up at every Filipino gathering without fail: Hennessy and lumpia. Hennessy runs deep in Filipino culture, showing up at every tita’s house party, every family BBQ, every gathering where the food is good and the stories get louder as the night goes on. Putting that on a brand is not a gimmick. It is a biography.

Every shirt in this collection is unisex, true to size, and made in the Bay Area by Filipinos. The community shows up in how these are made, not just in what they say.

Join the official release party on June 20th

Drop 2 of the Spring/Summer collection releases online and in person on June 20th at the official release party.

Where: Quickly Benicia, 822 Southampton Rd, Benicia, CA 94510

All the new Spring/Summer designs will be available in person. The Quickly Benicia location already merges the two worlds the de Vera brothers have always lived in: boba and Filipino food, two cultures that make perfect sense together. The release party fits right in.

Shop now with 20% off

Drop 1 is live at hennyandlumpia.com. Use code SPRING26 at checkout for an additional 20% off. Code expires June 30, 2026.

Sizes are limited. Some of these designs will not come back.

About Henny & Lumpia

Henny & Lumpia is a Filipino American streetwear brand founded by Paul Andre and Lloyd de Vera, the brothers behind Filthy Dripped, the first Filipino-owned hip hop streetwear brand out of the Bay Area. The brand makes sharp, honest clothing for Filipino Americans who want their style to say something true about who they are. All shirts are unisex, true to size, and made in the Bay Area by Filipinos. All Pride. No Apology.

Media Contact
Company Name: PR Stacks
Contact Person: Paul Andre de Vera
Email: Send Email
Phone: (510) 629-9923
Address:4100 Brookdale Ave
City: Oakland
State: CA
Country: United States
Website: https://www.prstacks.com