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My last 4 pairs of trainers have been.
However, in a risky break from tradition (and to show that I am still young) I took the plunge for something different (go for it...what the hell!) and have just received in the post a pair of these.
I've reached the stage in life where.
1) I buy the same thing over and over again.
2) I buy my trainers mail order.
3) I buy cheap shoes.
I am 45.
I am tempted to upgrade the laces to white ones though.
At the grand age of 41, the only trainers I have bought since I was 15 have been Adidas Superstars (other than running shoes)
Probably had 100 pairs over the last 25 years. (And still have quite a lot of them!)
Isn't it a just an accepted fact that as a British male* your choice of trainers is frozen in time the moment you hit 18. Whatever you're wearing then, you are pre-ordained to wear for the rest of your life. In most cases this is good. Not so if you had white Reebok Classics on though. All i wear, and have ever worn, is Adidas Gazelle or New Balance. Anything else would just be... well... a bit like wanton showy-offy extravagance
* with the obvious exception of those who bowl from the pavilion end, who tend to be more adventurous in all aspects of their lives
you buy trainers? You are 45 going on 11 🙂
Im all about the Crocs. Yes, I have given up on life.
Not so if you had white Reebok Classics
LMAO! Guess what the wife's trainer of choice is!
Hmmm. I recently considered buying a pair of the re-released Nike Air Huarache as they were the most comfortable running trainers I have ever owned. I dread to think how many miles I did in the pair I owned when I was about 16/17.
But,
- they are something like £80
- the colours are very shouty
- I am no longer a teenager and not sure shouty bling trainers just for wearing around are a good idea!
I also looked at the Air Jordan as I had a ltd edition pair of those but they are now going for over £100!!
I'm 43 and have bought Adidas exclusively since I started buying my own trainers, I thought that was bad enough and have been berated for being so 'anally retentive'. Only buying one type is extreme dedication.
I felt proper adventurous when I bought my first pair of 5 tens only to learn that they are in fact owned by Adidas.
I just go to the New Balance shop in Shap every couple of years, and see what's in the bargain bin.
[quote=Stoner said]you buy trainers? You are 45 going on 11
This 🙂
Nike air max for me 😳
47 and not bought the same style of trainers more than twice.
Not that it really matters, wear what you like. if you've discovered that Sambas are the thing for you then more power to you.
Always been about Adidas until the mid life crisis kicked in.
Had a couple of pairs of Nike, Patrick, Diadora etc in my youth.
But I was callow and easily influenced then.
Vans now - cheap (if you shop about), comfy, very slightly sad.
Love 'em.
New Balance for anything involving actual activity - always from the discount shop in Keswick when I'm on holiday.
[patronising]Not that it really matters, wear what you like. if you've discovered that Sambas are the thing for you then more power to you. [/patronising]
FTFY
I have Pumas, Hummels, Kerfas, Tevas and Salomons.
The Pumas get the most wear.
I am 50.
Did you do the whole Kick, Mamba, Bamba, Samba thing?
My mate Ged still wears Kick when he can get them.
Cheapskate. 🙂
He wears Kick? Through choice? Does he still get bullied as a result? 😉
We did a mock TV advert about him when we were teenagers -
Camera moves along the floor of a pub, observing the shoes of those sat at the tables, then moving upwards to display the wearer.
Those with posh trainers were nursing a half.
Ged's table was stacked with pints.
Yes, of course we took the piss. 😀
He had a pair of British Knights once too, but we don't talk about that.
Yep, Superstars all the way. I went to the Adidas 'clinic' and had a custom pair of superstars birthed for me.
Never been so excited.
current choice is dictated by wallet emptying family life. What I have now has to last through all the way to gardening stage.
OP you are correct - Adidas make trainers, all others are clown footwear.
My kids devotion to Nike makes me ashamed.
vans
Vans Sk8 Hi Pro FTW.
I am 47 and still wear DC, Vans are so common....
Adidas all the way for me at 44 yo
The locked on teenage thing rings true to me. Current crop:
Zx 600 original grey/yellow colours
Trimm trab x 2
Zx 800 x 2
Oregon
Micro pacer (these are silver - I can't wear them any more
Centre court pro
Grand Prix
A discerning collection there tops 5
I'm 44 have have always just accepted as a truism that there's Adidas, and everything else is secondary and inferior
I'm 38 and my current stock consists of:
3 or 4 pairs of Etnies
3 pairs of vans
2 pairs of new balance
1 pair of merrels
1 pair of Puma
2 pairs of element
and probably a couple more I've forgotten about!!
I might have too many.......
Isn't it a just an accepted fact that as a British male* your choice of trainers is frozen in time the moment you hit 18
In the same way that the golden age of punk is either a) 1977 or b) whatever year you were revising for your O Levels - i.e. 1986
😀
I have become rabidly addicted to Vans in the last few years though.
Bought a cheap pair on a whim and now have six pairs. 😐
Still, not as sad as a hair transplant.
ads678 - MemberI'm 38 and my current stock consists of:
3 or 4 pairs of Etnies
3 pairs of vans
2 pairs of new balance
1 pair of merrels
1 pair of Puma
2 pairs of element
and probably a couple more I've forgotten about!!I might have too many.......
You're female yeah ?
blokes talking about shoe acquisition is just wrong.
After a brief run-in (fnar!) with 'fashionable' training shoes in early youth, I soon exchanged the concern for either utility, fun, or both combined. No brand loyalty other than comfort and/or durability.
You could say I chose life and gave up on fashion. And yes, Crocs 😆
Weeksy - you could say i've got boobs, but the chest hair wouldn't look great in anything low cut to show the off!!
It appears that large percentage of us fortysomethings have obsessively funded some very happy marketing execs over the last few decades. Sweatshops too...
I hear the ghost of Bill Hicks is not happy...
if the 'what you wore at 18 sticks' then there should be great swathes of mid/late 30yo men wearing air jordans... I never had a pair I thought they were a ridiculous price
I have a pair of brown suede G star for smartish wearing but they have vertical stripes and look kinda like rounded toe samba 🙂
tried merrell and very well made but a very wide fitting, I now have ones I can't even remember the brand of but are very comfy, like a walking trainer
Bill Hicks was wrong and not that funny. There - I've said it.
Nike
Innov8
Teva
Merrell
Addidas
41 here, no particular loyalty apart from Merrell.
The ONLY plus site to HTS choice is that they are not white. White trainers just scream ned/chav and for that reason ahm oot.
blokes talking about shoe acquisition is just wrong.
No it isn't. On a forum where people talk about their bikes that cost the same as the GDP of a medium size African nation, mentioning the shoes you bought seems a pretty innocuous indulgence.
While women's obsessions remain a mystery to most blokes, a lot 'get' the whole shoe thing. I come from a northern working class culture where as a kid, your trainers took on an almost mythical status (and at the time Adidas were king). I don't think, rightly or wrongly, you ever really grow out of it. I think that chimes with the earlier statement about your taste being arrested at the age of 18
Oh... and anyone who has ever had a pair of crocs on their feet should be immediately disqualified from commenting on this thread. Your opinion is about as valid as a vegan commenting on how to cook the perfect steak, or who makes the best sausages.
Is it just me, or does any item of clothing with Nike or Adidas on it scream, "Chav" or, "no taste" anyway? 😉
Vans
Puma
Converse
Merrell
Mizuno
and a pair of Dunlop Green Flash that look older than me 🙂
Thats just snobbery really. Adidas and Nike have produced some absolutely timeless, classic designs. Anyone not taking part in a sporting activity, wearing tracky bottoms however..... 😉
Gore-tex lined Merrels for me.
Had a couple of pairs of Vans, but had to admit i didn't like them
I do like my Adidas Kanadia trail running shoes though
i've got a stupid amount of trainers. it's great.
4x vans
3x macbeth
1x DC
1x etnies
1x duffs
1x adidas
1x salomon
1x inov8
1x sheep
1x emerica
1x merrell
I might actually be Binners. 😳
Is it just me, or does any item of clothing with Nike or Adidas on it scream, "Chav" or, "no taste" anyway?
It's not just you. I worked (past tense) in marketing and design for my sins - and big brands actually cater for perceived social exclusion and actively reinforce stereotypes (whether 'valid' or 'invalid', whatever side of the fence you're on) if it's profitable they will profit from it. We wouldn't judge a child living literally off a dump for his choice in footwear, we might rightly consider that his real 'self', his passions, intellect, character etc are all nothing whatsoever to do with his choice of footwear.
On the other hand I should be banned from discussing the concept or practice of brand loyalty on account of being unfashionable, irregardless of whether or not I too was slavish at any time earlier in life. (I know it's just banter, just being rhetorical here)
It's just shooooz! I do find it all really interesting, sociologically/behaviorally - in group/out group, people can get really heated up defending brands etc...kids have been killed/committed suicide over shoes. Nowhere is shoe-craze so active as hip-hop/rap culture, even more than STW! For instance, was a fan of De La Soul but their FB feed is 90% shoe-fetishism, sort of put me off them! Sometimes i think we're living in a re-imagined sportswear equivalent of post-pompadour Georgian society
Not really about brand loyalty more about not falling apart, other trainers I've worn self destruct in weeks. I've got Adidas trainers I've used for 20 years. That and run DMC etc...
Only brand I really liked were Simple and they have gone away 🙁
On the other hand I should be banned from discussing the concept or practice of brand loyalty on account of being unfashionable, irregardless of whether or not I too was slavish at any time earlier in life.
+1
42 and no brand loyalty, just try to buy what is comfortable and not too 'shouty', which seems difficult these days, I'm not keen on brash loud trainers with wacky style soles etc.
LOL I remember the older guys wearing Sambas when I was wearing my Kick. My dad told me that kick were better for football anyway. I thought I had made it to the big time when I got my mambas.Did you do the whole Kick, Mamba, Bamba, Samba thing?
44 and forever in skate shoes.
Always used to be Vans but they went off the boil a few years back IMHO. On to DC now.
Also got a few pairs of Merrels for actual 'outdoor' use (though my next pair will more likely be Salomon or Keen), and some Nike for the rate occasion I play 5 a side.
Isn't it a just an accepted fact that as a British male* your choice of trainers is frozen in time the moment you hit 18. Whatever you're wearing then, you are pre-ordained to wear for the rest of your life. In most cases this is good. Not so if you had white Reebok Classics on though. All i wear, and have ever worn, is Adidas Gazelle or New Balance. Anything else would just be... well... a bit like wanton showy-offy extravagance
I heard it that the cut-off is whenever you leave full time education. That applies better for me than 18 does. On the other hand I was never very fashion or style conscious at all so it's only the basic look (jeans, t-shirts, trainers) that's been constant, I've never been too picky about the brands except for generally not buying expensive stuff.
I'm 45. I bought my last trainers 25 years ago. They were pink (and a bargain).
If anyone can find me a pair of adidas titan running shoes in brown, size 46 is get them a pint
Adidas, Puma, Nike, Converse, Vans, Five Ten...
Love Cortez, Stan Smith, Superstar, Ciero, All Star Suedes, Suedes, Baskets in particular. Also really love the Five Ten Tennie Guide shoes.
I will hit 40 in December...
failedengineer - Member
Is it just me, or does any item of clothing with Nike or Adidas on it scream, "Chav" or, "no taste" anyway?
POSTED 6 HOURS AGO # REPORT-POST
It's not just you - but no matter how many of you there are you will all be wrong! 😆
Adidas all the way. If you are over 25 and still wear Vans you need to have a word with yourself.
I had a word. Turns out they're extremely comfy, pretty understated, and longlived so I'm going to keep wearing them.
33 - only wear nikes
been though the dunk sb phase, pusheads got me started, Tiffanys i paid an arm and leg for, hawaii's were good, lots of love for "hair highs" , golfs, stussys, avenger pack, reese forbes, still got most,
moved to AM1's, then to Free Run 2's - now on Flyknit Max
also have a deadstock pair of Swagger x Terminators that don't even fit me, End Clothing stiched me up
I wear chinos, so I win.
at present I have about 10 pairs of Cons in different colours and states or wear, but occasionally can be seen in Nike 6.0 for skating and 5.10 for riding...
Oh and I'm 38, and have lost count of how many pairs of Cons I have had over the years
Is it just me, or does any item of clothing with Nike or Adidas on it scream, "Chav" or, "no taste" anyway?
No it's not just you.
I don't understand the adult male fascination with exercise pumps made out of cheap materials in sweatshops?
Fair enough if you partake in exercise and need some jogging shoes but buying gaudy plimsoles to wear to the pub just looks like you wish you were still 13 and kicking a football around the park.
Mainly Nike here. A few pairs of Adidas (fabric shell toes, zx9000) and I'd have more but they always feel a bit narrow for my feet.
Trainers, or sports shoes, are for doing sport in. Birkies are for 54 year olds, tho' I have yet to wear them with socks.
I had a word with myself about vans too, turns out I've been wearing them for 25 years so I think I'm ok. I can only wear skate shoes, Nike SB at the moment. Had some nice Adidas skateboard ones too a while back. DC have been naff for a decade if not more!
I think going onto an Internet forum to give yourself an erection by telling strangers what shoes they should or shouldn't wear makes you seem like a thirteen year old growing up in a darkened room not being taught any social skills.
I tend to only wear skate trainers. My ankles thank me for the support.
My missus has tried to get me into brown shoe/trainers from time o time but she generally knows she's beat after 13 years of trying.
Emerica and Vans Half Cabs at the moment
Is it just me, or does any item of clothing with Nike or Adidas on it scream, "Chav" or, "no taste" anyway?
Wearing Lonsdale clothing definitely appears to be a marker for social deprivation.
Nike Cortez FTW. I used to wear them for work and they were great, until it became difficult to get sufficiently inconspicuously white ones.
I don't understand the adult male fascination with exercise pumps made out of cheap materials in sweatshops?
'Exercise pumps'?
You may as well call Paris Hilton's accessory bag a 'rucksack'
High profile branded training shoes tell us about someone's core identity, their person - their achievements and aspirations - not to mention their social status/peer identity and peer group acceptance level. They may also denote the 'playfulness' or 'seriousness' of the wearer. Non-branded sends an adverse message to others - ie 'I don't care about my life, I chose to lose'. Think yellowing Hi-Tec-wearing sex pest or ginger combover-cadet in no-name wellingtons
In short - correct trainers say 'winner'. Incorrect trainers say 'loser'.
Choose carefully, your credibility is at stake.
'Pumps'? wtf? Pumps are for kids. Fashion is a grownup thing.
High profile branded training shoes tell us about someone's core identity, their person - their achievements and aspirations - not to mention their social status/peer identity and peer group acceptance level.
Do you by any chance work in sales or marketing?
Is that a Nathan Barley sketch?
Shoes ? Yes, many and varied
Trainers ? No, not in training for anything
Just checked and it seems Vans and Adidas in that order. One pair of G-Star because they look really good and were cheap and a pair of Reebok for the gym.
No it's not just you.
I don't understand the adult male fascination with exercise pumps made out of cheap materials in sweatshops?
Fair enough if you partake in exercise and need some jogging shoes but buying gaudy plimsoles to wear to the pub just looks like you wish you were still 13 and kicking a football around the park.
Problem is, what to wear with my shorts and polo tshirt? flip flops or retro trainers. Please Help!
High profile branded training shoes tell us about someone's core identity, their person - their achievements and aspirations - not to mention their social status/peer identity and peer group acceptance level.
Bret Easton Ellis is reimagining Patrick Bateman as a chav and I claim my five pounds.











