6 months ago
Stance: Jordan 4s

After I wrapped up my first Stance vinyl toy, I wanted more. This time I wanted to put some real time into one and break away from the 2D surface with some Super Sculpey polymer clay. I decided to try my hand at recreating the Nike Jordan 4. I chose this sneaker because it was A) one of the best looking Jordan models ever made, and B) proportionally close to the last shape of the Stance kicks.

I started by roughing in the pattern and midsole with blue pencil lines. Once I nailed down the proportions, I began building out the three dimensional layers by outlining each pattern piece in a thin strip of Sculpey. Next, I rolled out thin sheets of the clay to cut the forms for the plastic lacing and heel components. To get the correct collar height and shape, I had to cut away the stock collar to build up the achilles notch and lengthen the tongue.

The real challenge was to create the appearance of material layering without building the surface out too much. It took several rounds of priming and sanding to blend the clay with the underlying vinyl form without a notable textural difference. The laces were another tricky one. It took a while to get the laces rolled out to the exact same thickness and width to make them look natural. 

Once the the sculpting part was clean enough for me to get over my OCD, I baked it in the oven at 275F for 15 minutes and let it cool overnight. I painted the base model with off-the-shelf flat black Krylon spray paint. I then painted the accent details in a combo of French Grey, Neon Yellow, and White artists grade acrylic paint. I was pretty happy with the end results and learned a whole lot about working with polymer clay. 

Jordan 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance Jorden 4 - Stance Jordan 4 - Stance

1 year ago
Hyde Park Mid

For my latest design I wanted to balance the simplicity of my previous post with something a little more dynamic. After throwing down some sketches in my Moleskine, I hit upon a thumbnail that had potential. The end result was solid mid-cut skate sneaker that I’m pretty happy with. 

The primary visual element is a color popped eyestay overlay attached to the front quarter panel with a closed seam for grip tape abrasion. The top of the eyestay continues into the main ankle overlay for stability. The heel overlay is offset from the collar lining to keep the achilles notch nice and soft. Because I wanted to add some flavor to this design, I made the tongue pretty long and added a closed seam so it would kick forward nicely.  Lastly, I the sole is a combination of a molded rubber cupsole with a compression molded EVA foam midsole partially exposed at the shank. The heel of the cup has a slightly concave profile that smooths out as it wraps around to the sidewall.

The name is a tip of the hat to the gritty and abysmal skate park in Hyde Park, MA. It’s a park that perfectly reflects the realities of skateboarding in Massachusetts. Concrete that’s chipped and cracked. Warped and destroyed sidewalks from snow maintenance. Black ice on the mini ramp. Skaters and BMX kids who are there year round in any weather.

Not sure if anyone has written about this, but a couple years ago some local skaters took the time to build and pour a bunch of concrete ramps that were hilariously omitted from the original plans. There were literally no good approach ramps in the park aside from one shallow double sided funbox that was more suited for BMX. The ramps that these kids poured weren’t exactly an homage to German engineering, but they added some key features that were totally missing. Sure enough, someone from the city eventually started creepin’, and shortly thereafter they were all demolished.

So, thank you lawyers and insurance agents and all the other people who ruin everything for everyone. 

Hyde Park Sketch Hyde Park Mid - Black Hyde Park Mid - Brown Hyde Park Mid - Maroon Hyde Park Mid - Grey

1 year ago
State of the Union

The blog is going back into an active state after a busy stretch of living this existence to the max. November brought on a crippling extracurricular footwear design project that coincided perfectly with an enormous deadline. Once I collected the remaining pieces of my soul, I began work on a refined Illustrator version of one of my most recent sketches for a new urban clipless bike shoe.

I had this design on my screen for weeks and I continued to finesse the lines and details because it never quite felt finished. After repeatedly walking away from it, I came to the painfully obvious conclusion that I hated the design and I should just move on. Overlooking this fact set my blogging back substantially because I couldn’t just throw it in the dumpster. Not every post is going to be the best thing I’ve ever done, but there’s already enough shitty work on the internet so I try not add to it.

Anyways, the holidays are over and we’re gonna get back to regular content. Enjoy!

Clipless Bike 2 - Fail Sketchbook - December 2010