âEveryone wants themâ: the trainers that sold for $150,000 | Men’s shoes

When a trainer commands a six-figure price at its own Sothebyâs auction, you know it has transcended everyday shoe status. Indeed, no sensible sneakerhead â if such a thing exists â would wear any of the 40 rare Nike Air Force 1 trainers that were sold on Tuesday at Sothebyâs New Yorkâs â40 for 40â sale (so-called as this year marks the shoeâs 40th anniversary).
The AF1 is not just a trainer; it is a cultural phenomenon. Designed as a basketball shoe by Bruce Kilgore in 1982, it was expected to be replaced by the AF2, the AF3 and so on, but consumer demand put paid to that. âItâs the perfect design in its simplicity,â says Simon Wood, the founder of Sneaker Freaker magazine.
It is also an incredibly well-connected shoe, with close links to NBA stars, hip-hop royalty and high-fashion brands. All this, says Wood, âpercolates into creating an aura that is far more dynamic than the shoe itselfâ. So, which of the worldâs most covetable AF1s proved most desirable of all?
Sold for $151,200 (about £123,000)

Why spend six figures on a shoe that you canât â or musnât â wear? The answer is Virgil Abloh, the trailblazing US fashion designer and Louis Vuitton menswear director who died last year. âHe had the brilliant idea to marry two opposite universes â street culture and luxury,â says Mathieu Le Maux, a French journalist and the author of 1,000 Sneakers. âHe was an artist, and now he is a legend â thatâs why everyone wants it.â
When the monogrammed calf-leather shoe was released in February, one pair â a dinky, perfectly proportioned UK size 3 â sold for $352,800. Even at that price, they are an investment, says Wood: âAs the last thing Abloh did with Nike, it will still be historically significant in 30 yearsâ time.â With just 200 pairs in existence, it is all about scarcity. âSome could burn down in a house fire, or they could be worn and destroyed,â says Wood. Truly, the sneakerheadâs worst nightmare.
Sold for $35,280

This already good-looking shoe features several extra layers of street cred, visible and invisible. First, should it escape you that this is another Abloh design (under the auspices of his cult streetwear label Off-White), he has handily written his name on it, complete with his signature quotation marks.
Whatâs more, Abloh dedicated this pair to the US DJ and tastemaker Bobbito Garcia. Not only was Garcia, as the co-host of New Yorkâs fabled Stretch Armstrong and Bobbito Show, responsible for putting unsigned artists such as Nas, Jay-Z and Eminem on the map, but he is also an AF1 aficionado (and has himself collaborated with Nike).
There is also a high-art association, with the shoe being âsynchronisedâ with Ablohâs Figures of Speech exhibition at the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art, according to Sothebyâs. These shoes have since come to be known as the âICAâ . It all adds to the halo. âThe price reflects that,â says Wood. âItâs way above what that shoe would actually be worth.â
Sold for $35,280

âYouâll never see Nike make these shoes again,â says Wood. Given that these are made with alligator skin, many will be pleased to hear this. It was produced as a run of just 25 in the 00s, before many fashion brands agreed to stop using exotic animal skins. âOwning them is kind of painful,â says Wood. âIf you travel with them, you have to take the paperwork with you everywhere [to prove its legal origin]. So that adds another dimension to them.â
Sold for $21,420

This is one for the real trainer nerds. The Ekin â âNikeâ backwards â is, according to the Sothebyâs catalogue, âsymbolic of the âbackwards and forwardsâ product knowledge of Nike employeesâ. Ekins are a devoted subset of Nike workers, known for tattooing themselves with the reverse logo.
This shoe, produced in 2019, pays homage to them and features such Nike geekery as the backwards logo, lining that reads âFor Ekin feet onlyâ and the slogan âE4Lâ, which represents the mantra âEkin for Lifeâ. The question is â are you Ekin enough for these shoes?
Sold for $21,420

Unless you were in Eminemâs crew, there was no chance of getting hold of these all-white AF1s when they were released in 2003, to celebrate the rapperâs fifth album, Encore. âFriends and family pairs are special editions made for the inner circle of a celebrity or a brand and are far rarer than general-release pairs,â says Brahm Wachter, the head of streetwear and modern collectibles at Sothebyâs. They were the whitest pair of trainers in the auction. As Le Maux says: âAll the purists will tell you the Air Force 1 is white â and only white.â