sooo
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Nike Air Huarache Femme
« on: Jul 17th, 2018, 11:03pm » |
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In Nike Air Max Jewell Donna 1998, Nike introduced the Tuned 1, also known as the TN. Nike's creative director Sean McDowell came up with the shoe after seeing palm trees silhouetted by a sunset on holiday. In Australia, this sunset gradient was interpreted as a two-tone spray paint fade, over which a series of angry-looking veins gave the TN its characteristic "ribbed" look. To me and my friends, living in Melbourne's outer suburbs, TNs instantly became the product of our Nike Air Max 90 Femme Blanche environment. Whenever my dad took me to his shoe stall in the Dandenong markets, there were always a few rattled-looking customers asking if we stocked TNs. It was the early 2000s, and these grimy customers might have sported weathered faces and ankle monitors, but they also rocked the freshest kits a train station hang-around could dream of. Snap button Adidas trackies, Sergio Tacchini spray jackets, bum bags, and Nike TNs—straight out of the box. The shoe's hefty $240 price tag and aggressive look instantly placed it on a golden pedestal. I remember chasing the latest colours Nike Air Max Classic BW Womens harder than all of my teenage crushes combined. The first Nike Internationalist Damen pair I ever bought were black with green swooshes. They were half-price at Footlocker and a size too small, but I told my dad they were a perfect fit. It was worth all the pain. The venomous green veins that wrapped around the shoe in hard plastic echoed the sentiment of a poisoned carcass. The shoes were an emblem of thuggish anarchy, a subtle Nike Air Max Jewell Dame air-raid to your peers that you were "doing well" off the street. When you wore Nike Air Max 90 Femme Noir TNs you became part of an underground movement governed Nike Air Max Command Womens by the remnants of DMX, the Slim Shady EP, and graffiti culture. Before TNs, I don't remember anyone's shoes receiving compliments. The whole sneaker geek movement was incredibly niche, so it was either you stood out with your TNs or you didn't. It was also the only time young larrikins did anything that got them more props from guys than girls. In fact most girls seemed to hate TNs, and thought wearing them was a totally self-indulgent endeavour. Today, TNs are selling in the suburbs just as hard, but their statement has shifted to something more ironic. These days they're worn by guys re-appropriating 90s sports chic with their dad's Kappa Nike Air Huarache Femme jacket and a Nautica cap. And yet, adoration for the shoes is just as devout as it ever was. To get inside this love for the Nike TN, I asked people to send me photos of their prized collections. We spoke about the shifting TN culture, and what it felt like to rock their first pair.
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