snaps | warrior sneakers in ho chi minh ::
Wednesday, September 9th, 2009:: taken in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; a pedicab driver wearing Warrior (回力) sneakers. // AjS
:: taken in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; a pedicab driver wearing Warrior (回力) sneakers. // AjS
:: Over the weekend I spotted this pair of classic Warrior (回力) tennies while walking up the stairs of my friend’s house (who lives in this old neighborhood). The shoes were his neighbors. Simple, comfortable, classic. // AjS
:: I’m a fan of Chinese retro and “revolutionary” footwear. This past weekend I picked up another pair of Shanghai-made Warrior / Huili (回力) trainers. The shoes are great, of course, but check out the packaging. This is a beautiful, timeless shoebox. The font and copy are nearly perfect, especially the line: 穿回力鞋, 走成功路, which In English is something like “Wear Huili Shoes, Walk the Road of Success.” It’s so much better in Chinese, perhaps that’s why Huili didn’t bother translating it. Bravo, well done. // AjS
:: related to a previous post about retro Chinese sneakers, below are two pairs of limited edition Warriors and a collection of limited edition dolls / action figures donning a pair of Warriors designed as part of AMG Labs’ PROJECT RE:BORN (回忆回力), a “brand revitalization exercise” with the classic Chinese sneaker brand Warrior (回力, Huili). // AjS
:: …first came the original, Huili / Warrior (回力), priced between RMB 30 – 65…
…then came the, also original, Feiyue (飞跃) sneaker, priced between RMB 30 – 65…
…now there is The People’s Shoes (人民牌), a modern, higher-quality and more comfortable, hybrid version of the above two, by Anton Brandt (who, by the way, is cool enough to donate a portion of the brand’s profits to The Starfish Project, a Cambodia-based humanitarian organization), priced at USD 42 (RMB 285)…
…similarly, there is also OSPOP. (One Small Point of Pride.)’s Skywolf sneaker line by Ben Walters, priced at USD 76 (RMB 520)…
…which is essentially an indie-hipster remix version of Tianlang’s (天狼, literally “Skywolf”) classic revolutionary-flavored Chinese military / migrant worker “liberation shoes” (解放鞋), and also the timeless Chinese electrical workers’ “boot,” priced between RMB 10 – 35…
…and of course, let us not forget about the recent return of traditional Chinese “cloth shoes” (布鞋) to the modern fashion scene, priced between RMB 10 – 30…
…and last but not least, my favorite, a shanzhai’d NIKE version of “liberation shoes,” by a young man who actually wears them during military training exercises, priceless. // AjS