There are moments in life you assume will always be there waiting for you.
Concerts you’ll go to someday. Songs you’ll hear live eventually. Nights that feel guaranteed simply because the music exists.
Mac Miller was one of those guarantees, we never missed a local show!
His music wasn’t just something you listened to, it was something you lived alongside. It was there in the car after late summer rounds. It was there in headphones walking home alone at night. It was there in the background while building Muni Kids from nothing. It was there during the wins, and more importantly, it was there during the losses.
Mac represented growth. Real growth. The kind that isn’t clean or linear. The kind that comes with scars, reflection, and acceptance.
And then one day, that guarantee was gone.
There would never be another tour announcement. Never another opportunity to stand in a crowd and hear those songs performed live again. Never another night where the lights dimmed and a voice that helped carry so many people forward stepped onto a stage.
That absence leaves a strange kind of space behind. One that doesn’t close.
So we decided to create something inside that space.
Not to replace it. Not to replicate it.
But to honor it.
The Idea: Build the Moment That Never Happened
The concept behind the FACES v3 Golf Headcovers started with a simple but heavy question:
What if we could take the homies to a Mac Miller concert?
Not metaphorically. Literally.
What if we could exist inside that world for just one moment? What would it look like? Where would we stand? What would it feel like to be there... Not as spectators looking back, but as participants inside the energy itself?
This wasn’t about nostalgia. It was about presence.
We didn’t want to make something that felt like it was remembering Mac from a distance. We wanted to make something that existed with him. Something alive. Something current. Something that blurred the line between reality and imagination.
Because imagination is the only place left where new moments like that can still exist.
The Artistic Process: Bringing the Homies Into the Crowd
To bring this idea to life, the project had to be built from the ground up... Not just as a product, but as a scene.
Drew Reinland, Muni Kids’ in-house artist and co-founder, took on the responsibility of illustrating the entire environment. This wasn’t about dropping characters into a background. It was about building a believable world where every figure had a presence.
Every posture, every expression, every detail was drawn intentionally. Some characters are fully locked into the moment, eyes forward, absorbing the performance. Others are turned toward each other, sharing reactions. Some exist in quiet reflection.
Just like real life.
Because the best concerts aren’t just about the artist on stage. They’re about the people you experience them with.
Why “FACES”
The title FACES v3 carries weight.
Mac Miller’s Faces mixtape represents one of the most honest and vulnerable artistic documents ever created. It exists in a space between chaos and clarity. Between darkness and growth.
It’s not polished. It’s real.
That honesty mirrors the creative process behind Muni Kids itself. Building something meaningful isn’t clean. It’s messy. It’s uncertain. It requires belief when there’s no proof yet. It requires continuing forward when there’s no guarantee of where the path leads.
Faces aren’t static. They change. They evolve.
This headcover represents a face of Muni Kids. A face of memory. A face of imagination.
The Intersection of Golf and Meaning
At its core, Muni Kids has never just been about golf fashion or headcovers.
Golf is the vehicle. The canvas.
The real subject has always been life... The moments surrounding the game. The conversations on tee boxes. The silence walking down fairways. The way music fills the gaps between swings.
This headcover exists in that intersection.
It lives on a golf club, but it carries something much heavier than protection. It carries story. It carries emotion. It carries tribute.
Every time someone pulls this headcover off their club, they’re interacting with more than a product. They’re interacting with a moment that was imagined into existence.
And in that moment, the concert happens again.
Why Illustration Matters
Photography captures what exists.
Illustration captures what doesn’t.
That distinction is everything.
A photograph could never show the Muni Kids homies at a Mac Miller concert, because that moment never happened in reality.
But illustration makes space for truth beyond reality.
It allows emotion to dictate the scene rather than history.
It allows imagination to become tangible.
Drew didn’t just draw characters. He created presence. He created belonging. He created a visual representation of something felt but never seen.
That’s what makes this piece different.
It doesn’t document the past.
It creates a new memory.
Limited Edition by Design
Some pieces aren’t meant to exist forever.
The FACES v3 Golf Headcovers are limited edition because moments like this are inherently rare. They’re snapshots of a specific emotional and creative state. They represent where Muni Kids exists right now—not where it was, and not where it’s going, but where it is.
Limiting the release protects that integrity.
It ensures the piece remains personal. Intentional. Real.
Mass production removes meaning.
This isn’t mass production.
This is storytelling.
The Concert Lives On
Somewhere between memory and imagination, there’s a stage.
The lights are on. The music is playing. The homies are there.
And for a moment, everything exists exactly as it should.
The FACES v3 Golf Headcovers are a physical artifact of that moment.
Not because it happened.
But because it mattered enough to create.
Available Now For A Limited Time!

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