
We asked you to fill in the gaps from our last rundown of skateboarding’s more regrettable footwear concepts, and you came through bigtime. We took your suggestions, spent some time scouring the Google and found 7 more nightmares we only kind of want to relive. Maybe I’m beating a dead horse at this point …but seriously, who did these guys have designing shoes? Did they keep their jobs long?
1. Globe Chet Thomas CT-IV
These were a glaring omission from the first list (maybe in part because I always wanted a pair when they were around but had to settle for Converse). Chet Thomas famously said he’d skate until he couldn’t walk, so maybe he was just hedging his bets by putting as many protective elements as he possibly could into this one shoe design?
2. Nike SB “Golf” Dunk Low
More proof that you could take a shit, slap a “Nike SB” logo on it, call it limited, and suckers will rush to max their credit cards out. Are you fucking kidding me, Nike? More importantly, are you fucking kidding me, people who bought these?
3. Airwalk NTS
Remember when every skate shoe had a rubber toecap, so you could do all the of varial flips you wanted, knowing you’d wear through the sole of your shoes before you ever made it past the toecap? (But do you really remember how awful they were to skate for the first day or two, and then again after the first week or so, once your regular wear patterns got smooth and you didn’t have any control?)
4. Converse Chany Jeanguenin Pro-1
The line of skate shoes Converse tried shortly before being bought by Nike (the more you know) are hard for me to talk about now. I loved these when they were out — nobody was skating in them and I had been wearing Chucks since I was a little kid. But now, it’s like finding your sixth grade crush on Facebook. You remember the feelings, you know they were real once, but now, oh dear god why?
5. DC ProSpec 2
Well, some people were being awesome on the internet and pointed out that one of our DCs from the first article was designed for racecar driving because Ken Block is a cool bro. Fine, whatever. But what do you say to the subsequent models, complete with a seemingly skate-designed sole and skate-friendly stitching and paneling? Not to mention this shoe looks like Nickelodeon threw up my childhood on someone’s pair of Skytops.
6. Vans Pro Series
The trend stars didn’t align for Vans for a while. Vans sold simple, surf inspired shoes so you could feel and grip your board. Too bad they lasted about an hour once you started doing varial heels and hardflips and made your feet explode if you fell from a high place to a lower place. When they tried to catch up with the technical stormtrooper-boot fad… well, this is what happens when you do a bad job imitating something that just wasn’t that great to begin with.
7. eS Eclipse
This is what happens when the D3 becomes the most popular skate shoe of all time. You have eS, already infamous for making plastic moon boots from a dystopian marshmallow-shaped future, trying to copy/”improve” it. An eclipse is when the sun blocks the moon or vice versa. You’re never supposed to look directly at a solar eclipse. Maybe they were warning us? Maybe, deep down, they knew — don’t look at this. It’s the alien xenomorph wrapped in a tire. It’s an eclipse. Don’t look. It’ll damage your eyes forever.
If you missed it, check out the first 7 most terrifying skate shoes.
Words: Ian Graham
To complain about all shoes he forgot, follow him on Instagram.
Original Illustration: Michael Giurato
Shoe photos courtesy of Skately
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November 1, 2014 4:39 pm
These are back from when skate shoes had actual personalities and flavour, instead of just being the same exact looking vulcanized shoe that every company has. I remember seeing an ad for that Chany Converse shoe in a Transworld back when I was a kid, and I wanted it more than anything. At least now we’re starting to see shoes take a step away from the vulcanized, less is more style, with the Ellingtons or the Westgates and even now the Matt miller DC’s.
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November 1, 2014 6:02 pm
Back in the day the Globe Chet IVs, like the Osiris D3s were huge sellers. In Melbourne Australia at least. Despite everyone in the skateshop thinking they were ugly POS.
The grom’s couldn’t get enough of huge puffy shoes, and the D3 and the Chet IV were the OG. And other shoe co’s knew it so they tried to imitate. Hence a few of the other monstrosities on this page.
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November 2, 2014 11:42 am
The 2002 Dill from DVS.
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November 3, 2014 10:28 am
What… many of these are of tiny sizes… what is ridiculous is not so much the design, but how it looks so squashed up, so badly scaled from the bigger models. But then again who knows, maybe the big ones look even worse…
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