Here are the Final Designs of the Nike: On Air Winners
I
n 2018, The Nike: On Air contest brought thousands of participants to workshops in New York City, London, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai and Tokyo, where locals dreamed up shoe designs inspired by their communities. In May, 18 finalists were narrowed down to six winners (one from each city) who were invited to work alongside Nike designers and developers to bring their designs to life. The winners’ final shoes were revealed today.
"There are attributes in the shoes this year that I would have never even considered, like introducing tools to encourage consumer modularity or pushing the boundaries of material usage," says Dylan Raasch, Senior Creative Director of Nike Air Max. "These concepts prove that there are always new ways to approach design.”
Release of the Nike: On Air winning designs begins in April.
The Final Designs
Nike Air Max 98 La Mezcla, by Gabrielle Serrano
Nike Air Max 97 Neon Seoul, by Gwang Shin
Nike Air Max 97 London Summer of Love, by Jasmine Lasode
Nike Air Max 1 Tokyo Maze, by Yuta Takuman
Nike Air VaporMax Plus Paris Works in Progress, by Lou Matheron
Nike Air Max 97 SH Kaleidoscope, by Cash Ru
Read Below for the July 2018 Announcement of the Sample Reveal, Titled, "The Nike: On Air Journey Continues at World Headquarters."
The six winners of the Nike: On Air contest – hailing from New York City, London, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai, and Tokyo – recently flew to Nike World Headquarters to take the next step in their sneaker design journey. At Nike WHQ, each winner had the chance to refine their shoes with a team of footwear designers, materials and color designers, and developers who collectively pored over the designs in individual teams. But before all of that, the moment of truth was revealed in a surprise first-look at their samples.
“When we were first told that our samples were in the next room, my first reaction was, “I’m going to faint,’” joked Gabrielle Serrano, winner of the NYC vote and designer of the Air Max 98 La Mezcla. “But then they led us to our samples, and I saw it for the first time. I felt like my head exploded. What I drew was actually in my hands."
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 12
Gabrielle Serrano explores features of her sample during a design session.
Months of effort from the winners culminated in the big reveal, and their even bigger reactions. But they quickly discovered that the process behind bringing a shoe to life is bigger still. The On Air winners were able to see firsthand the thorough steps involved in creating a top-flight product, from idea to prototype to completion. The product design workshops earlier this year were only the first step. The next phase included sessions at Nike WHQ with Nike teams in product development, who helped the winners refine their designs to hold up to the practical challenges of everyday wear.
"The shoe-making process is complex, but not in the way people expect,” says Dylan Raasch, Senior Creative Director of Nike Air Max. “Taking a story from 2D to 3D requires a different way of thinking to help the story become fully realized. The On-Air winners had to do this quickly, but each one created a design that brought their authentic stories to life.”
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 9
Cash Ru works alongside footwear designer Jesi Small and materials designer Vessela Yordanova in their sample design session, experimenting with different swatch palettes.
While that creative process will continue for the winners in the months to come as they perfect their shoes, their sample reveal at Nike WHQ showed the sheer scope of the steps involved in crafting their dream into a reality.
“Before this journey, I was not aware of these details behind the design process,” says Yuta Takuman, winner of the Tokyo vote and the designer of the Air Max 1 Tokyo Maze. “But now, I know more about the behind-the-scenes story of what it takes to make just one shoe, and it gives me a new perspective. There are so many different things that you have to think about.”
The inspiration came from both sides. As Nike designers and developers sat down with the winners and tinkered with the samples together, the Nike footwear teams were spurred on by the new creative energy put into the time-tested silhouettes.
“What the design teams and development teams found to be so energizing was the attention to detail that the winners pay to our products,” says Reggie Hunter, Product Line Manager for Nike Air Max. “All of the separate components were considered, from the outsole designs, to what the sockliner looked like. It’s refreshing to see how passionate they are about detail, and you saw it as they looked at their shoes.”
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 17
Jasmine Lasode sees a sample of her Air Max 97 London Summer of Love for the first time.
The next phase of the journey will pair the winners with their mentors, along with members from Nike’s marketing team, to uncover the narrative in their designs. For these winners, their On Air paths toward the ultimate goal – a final shoe – are still unfolding.
Here's what the winners had to say upon seeing their shoe samples
Gabrielle
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 13
“When I saw the sample, I couldn’t believe it. It came out exactly how I imagined it to look.”
Gwang
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 15
“The colors on the sample came out so well from the original design. I was joking that, once I saw the sample, I was ready to take it back with me to Korea. My trip was complete.”
Jasmine
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 21
“I kept thinking about how crazy this was. What I’ve literally imagined on paper has come through into what I’m looking at right now. It’s surreal.”
Yuta
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 23
“My first reaction was, ‘Perfect.’ When I walked around the corner and saw my sample on the table, I got goosebumps. I still have them.”
Lou
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 18
“I didn’t know that we’d get to see the samples. It’s incredible to think that I just designed a shoe for one of the biggest brands in the world. I kept thinking, ‘Is this really happening to me?”
Cash
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 11
“Walking around the corner and seeing the sample – It was like a dream come true. I was in shock.”
Read Below For The May Announcement on the Winning Shoes, Titled, "Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote"
Beginning May 8, sneaker enthusiasts across the world voted for six of their favorite shoe designs out of 18 international finalists of this year’s Nike: On Air contest. Followers casted hundreds of thousands of votes over the course of the voting window. Here’s your first look at this year’s winners and their designs.
New York City
Seoul
London
Tokyo
Paris
Shanghai
These six winners will take their next steps in their Nike On Air journeys in July when they visit the Nike World Headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, to meet with teams in product development and marketing. Follow Nike.com/OnAir for more information.
Click here to see the designs of the 18 finalists.
n 2018, The Nike: On Air contest brought thousands of participants to workshops in New York City, London, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai and Tokyo, where locals dreamed up shoe designs inspired by their communities. In May, 18 finalists were narrowed down to six winners (one from each city) who were invited to work alongside Nike designers and developers to bring their designs to life. The winners’ final shoes were revealed today.
"There are attributes in the shoes this year that I would have never even considered, like introducing tools to encourage consumer modularity or pushing the boundaries of material usage," says Dylan Raasch, Senior Creative Director of Nike Air Max. "These concepts prove that there are always new ways to approach design.”
Release of the Nike: On Air winning designs begins in April.
The Final Designs
Nike Air Max 98 La Mezcla, by Gabrielle Serrano
Nike Air Max 97 Neon Seoul, by Gwang Shin
Nike Air Max 97 London Summer of Love, by Jasmine Lasode
Nike Air Max 1 Tokyo Maze, by Yuta Takuman
Nike Air VaporMax Plus Paris Works in Progress, by Lou Matheron
Nike Air Max 97 SH Kaleidoscope, by Cash Ru
Read Below for the July 2018 Announcement of the Sample Reveal, Titled, "The Nike: On Air Journey Continues at World Headquarters."
The six winners of the Nike: On Air contest – hailing from New York City, London, Paris, Seoul, Shanghai, and Tokyo – recently flew to Nike World Headquarters to take the next step in their sneaker design journey. At Nike WHQ, each winner had the chance to refine their shoes with a team of footwear designers, materials and color designers, and developers who collectively pored over the designs in individual teams. But before all of that, the moment of truth was revealed in a surprise first-look at their samples.
“When we were first told that our samples were in the next room, my first reaction was, “I’m going to faint,’” joked Gabrielle Serrano, winner of the NYC vote and designer of the Air Max 98 La Mezcla. “But then they led us to our samples, and I saw it for the first time. I felt like my head exploded. What I drew was actually in my hands."
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 12
Gabrielle Serrano explores features of her sample during a design session.
Months of effort from the winners culminated in the big reveal, and their even bigger reactions. But they quickly discovered that the process behind bringing a shoe to life is bigger still. The On Air winners were able to see firsthand the thorough steps involved in creating a top-flight product, from idea to prototype to completion. The product design workshops earlier this year were only the first step. The next phase included sessions at Nike WHQ with Nike teams in product development, who helped the winners refine their designs to hold up to the practical challenges of everyday wear.
"The shoe-making process is complex, but not in the way people expect,” says Dylan Raasch, Senior Creative Director of Nike Air Max. “Taking a story from 2D to 3D requires a different way of thinking to help the story become fully realized. The On-Air winners had to do this quickly, but each one created a design that brought their authentic stories to life.”
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 9
Cash Ru works alongside footwear designer Jesi Small and materials designer Vessela Yordanova in their sample design session, experimenting with different swatch palettes.
While that creative process will continue for the winners in the months to come as they perfect their shoes, their sample reveal at Nike WHQ showed the sheer scope of the steps involved in crafting their dream into a reality.
“Before this journey, I was not aware of these details behind the design process,” says Yuta Takuman, winner of the Tokyo vote and the designer of the Air Max 1 Tokyo Maze. “But now, I know more about the behind-the-scenes story of what it takes to make just one shoe, and it gives me a new perspective. There are so many different things that you have to think about.”
The inspiration came from both sides. As Nike designers and developers sat down with the winners and tinkered with the samples together, the Nike footwear teams were spurred on by the new creative energy put into the time-tested silhouettes.
“What the design teams and development teams found to be so energizing was the attention to detail that the winners pay to our products,” says Reggie Hunter, Product Line Manager for Nike Air Max. “All of the separate components were considered, from the outsole designs, to what the sockliner looked like. It’s refreshing to see how passionate they are about detail, and you saw it as they looked at their shoes.”
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 17
Jasmine Lasode sees a sample of her Air Max 97 London Summer of Love for the first time.
The next phase of the journey will pair the winners with their mentors, along with members from Nike’s marketing team, to uncover the narrative in their designs. For these winners, their On Air paths toward the ultimate goal – a final shoe – are still unfolding.
Here's what the winners had to say upon seeing their shoe samples
Gabrielle
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 13
“When I saw the sample, I couldn’t believe it. It came out exactly how I imagined it to look.”
Gwang
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 15
“The colors on the sample came out so well from the original design. I was joking that, once I saw the sample, I was ready to take it back with me to Korea. My trip was complete.”
Jasmine
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 21
“I kept thinking about how crazy this was. What I’ve literally imagined on paper has come through into what I’m looking at right now. It’s surreal.”
Yuta
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 23
“My first reaction was, ‘Perfect.’ When I walked around the corner and saw my sample on the table, I got goosebumps. I still have them.”
Lou
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 18
“I didn’t know that we’d get to see the samples. It’s incredible to think that I just designed a shoe for one of the biggest brands in the world. I kept thinking, ‘Is this really happening to me?”
Cash
Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote 11
“Walking around the corner and seeing the sample – It was like a dream come true. I was in shock.”
Read Below For The May Announcement on the Winning Shoes, Titled, "Meet the Winners — and Shoes — of the 2018 Nike: On Air Vote"
Beginning May 8, sneaker enthusiasts across the world voted for six of their favorite shoe designs out of 18 international finalists of this year’s Nike: On Air contest. Followers casted hundreds of thousands of votes over the course of the voting window. Here’s your first look at this year’s winners and their designs.
New York City
Seoul
London
Tokyo
Paris
Shanghai
These six winners will take their next steps in their Nike On Air journeys in July when they visit the Nike World Headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, to meet with teams in product development and marketing. Follow Nike.com/OnAir for more information.
Click here to see the designs of the 18 finalists.
Comments
Post a Comment