ÿþIn today's marketing landscape, it's not exactly the Adidas Black Sneakers standard strategy to create a shoe whose name is sure to drum up search results related to past legal troubles. ?But there was no arguing with the results of TheSoloist's collaboration on the first? adidas Originals Lawsuit , and this mita sneakers design is a worthy successor. ?The lush green suede and fat Three Stripes gives the Lawsuit a distinct look, though it's unclear if these will make it stateside like the? EQT Support-inspired mita ZX 8000s ?that matriculated to Packer in March. ?Stick with Sneaker News for updates and let us know if you'd cop these after seeing more images below.
So-Cal based UNDFTD teams up with adidas Originals on an appropriate new silhouette from the Three Stripes, the Los Angeles . The re-imagined and retooled take on the classic L.A. Trainer was given to the Adidas Adizero Cleats premier sneaker retailer from the city it shares its name with for this stylish edition, featuring UNDFTD's often-used militaristic aesthetic. This is achieved with the use of camo for the Los Angeles' all-mesh upper in a sleek black and grey color palette. Special details include dual branding on Adidas Adizero Football Cleats the tongue and the lateral Three Stripes in black with the medial stripes in a golden buff tone matching the tongue label.
The limited edition adidas Skateboarding x Helas Lucas sneaker will arrive at Trefoil Brand skate retailers starting February 10th alongside an entire collection of pastel-colored apparel.The Cliché Skateboards ?team is full of riders with sneaker sponsorships, but only one of them has his own signature model. ? Lucas Puig is one of a fab five of Frenchmen on the Cliché roster, and even Nike SB's Jeremie Daclin is sure to be jealous that their Adidas Bounce Women'S shared sponsor just authored a collaboration on Lucas' adi-sigs. ?The Cliché x adidas Lucas celebrates fifteen years of the former with the brand's trademark Pittsburgh-ish colorway featuring a monochromatic upper with yellow emanating from the sockliner.
And then you get some of the other creators that are in other industries whether that be fashion or sometimes global partners it creates this amazing swirl where what we're seeing is people having more fun with it and connecting at a higher level. And of course as a brand that creates a tremendous opportunity for us to create the future. It's a pretty exciting time.KA: Everything we do at adidas starts with the sport itself. Basketball focuses on how do we help a player play better, do whatever they want to do while expressing their style at the same time. The first thing that you're going to see is a tremendous acceleration of innovation.
You can create on the court and you can create in your life, and by doing that you can create in the world. And that's what gets us excited.Alex Zerzan has been with adidas for Adidas Duramo Slide almost a decade and has helped athletes get the most out of their footwear with innovative designs all while balancing performance and refined aesthetics. His role as adidas Crazy Explosive 17 Product Manager couldn't be more exciting with the current generation of signature athletes and new technologies from Boost, to Bounce, to Forged Primeknit ushering in more interest than ever for the brand. We took a few minutes out of Alex's more-than-hectic Las Vegas LVL 3 schedule to talk about working with designer Jesse Rademacher on the adidas Crazy Explosive 17, Damian Lillard's preference for Bounce over Boost, and more.