adidas

adidas, also known as The Three Stripes Brand, is a German sportswear company founded in 1949 by Adolf “Adi” Dassler. With roots in track and football, it has become a global player within the sneaker industry over the past 70 years.

With influence spanning football, basketball, tennis, skateboarding, fencing, and other sports, the company’s first performance-related breakthrough occurred in 1936 within the running space. Jesse Owens famously wore Dassler’s revolutionary canvas and rubber spiked running shoe in the Summer Olympics held in Germany that year. And while Owens’ record-breaking performance at the global competition brought adidas attention, the brand hadn’t yet found its identity; the spikes didn’t feature the brand’s now-signature 3-Stripes logo. (adidas acquired this branding from Finland’s Karhu in 1952.)

The German company achieved similar attention in subsequent decades within both the basketball and tennis spaces thanks to the Superstar (1969) and Stan Smith (1973), respectively. Other made-for-sports models like the adidas Top Ten (1979) and adidas Forum (1984) similarly became lifestyle staples in New York, Boston, Chicago, and other cities. adidas’ Superstar became the unofficial shoe of hip-hop in the 1980s largely due to RUN DMC’s superstardom. (The shell-toe was the best-selling sneaker in North America in 2016.) While less popular stateside, running silhouettes like the SL 72 (1972) and ZX 500 (1984) boast devoted fans of trainers across Europe and Asia. These silhouettes have experienced resurgences throughout the decades, and are now offered under the adidas Originals banner.

Recent years have seen 3-Stripes-branded sneakers soar in popularity, in large part because of the Kanye West led Yeezy sub-label and UltraBOOST, as well as BOOST and adidas 4D cushioning. The German company has also pioneered high-fashion collaborations, hosting Yohji Yamamoto’s Y-3 imprint since 2003. In 2020, classic silhouettes were reimagined by Prada and Craig Green. Elsewhere, partnerships with Beyoncé’s IVY PARK, Tyler “Ninja” Blevins, Jonah Hill, Pharrell and others ensured adidas remained the global behemoth it has been for decades.

Throughout 2024, the Three Stripes will surely continue its run as a proponent of the mix between sportswear and fashion. On this end, the brand signed FEAR OF GOD‘s Jerry Lorenzo to drive the creative and business strategy of its basketball category, culminating in the release of the Fear of God Athletics adidas Basketball 1, a shoe set for plenty of releases as the year draws on. It’s also been a banner year for adidas Basketball in terms of their signature athletes, with the German giant releasing Anthony Edwards’ AE1 & James Harden Vol. 8, while continuing a push for the Trae Young 3 and D.O.N. Issue #5.

Scroll below for the latest release dates and information on what adidas has in store for this year.

adidas

Art Basel Hits adidas With Trademark Lawsuit For Special Edition EQT Shoes

Remember the special edition adidas EQT Support ADV that released in limited supplies at Art Basel last fall? Despite the shoe looking great, it was...

By Zack Schlemmer May 31, 2017
10779

adidas To Release Pride Collection On June 1st

You’ve seen collections from Nike, and Converse celebrating diversity and the LGBTQ community for 2017, and now adidas presents their own Pride collection. Releasing on...

By Zack Schlemmer May 30, 2017
23769

adidas EQT Support ADV Releases For June 3rd

The adidas EQT Support ADV is coming back in a big way on June 3rd, 2017 as seven new colorways of this updated classic are...

By Sneaker News May 24, 2017
9457

Where To Buy The Overkill x adidas Consortium EQT Pack In The U.S.

Berlin sneaker shop Overkill takes advantage of their status of one of the select retailers within the prestigious adidas Consortium with a special EQT collection...

By Zack Schlemmer May 19, 2017
47418

Overkill And adidas Consortium Set To Release Two EQTs Soon

The last we heard from Overkill and adidas, the Berliners were reviving the adidas EQT Racing OG 93 in a way only they could. Now...

By Patrick Johnson May 8, 2017
82269