The Nike Air Fishnets? What’s this Shoe Called?

The Nike “Fishnets”

I picked up this shoe from eBay the other day. It cost me £39.54 after shipping. It arrived at my house. No original box and therefore nameless. Like a lost puppy. Except this puppy was made to be stepped on. Alas, not my best comparison. I sent a picture to my other trainer enthusiast friend to which he replied “Terrible, Nike Fishnets is it?”. An unsurprisingly mocking reply. Yet I did admire the creativity. Eager to find out the name of these webs, I wasn’t going to settle for the Nike Fishnets.

I was surprised to see the production label reveal that they were made back in the early 2008. My memories of free run technology were based on the 2011-14 era. I am in fact indebted to the Free Run 4.0 Flyknit model, which somehow saved my foot from a rather nasty puncture back in 2016. Having just had another ingrown toenail operation that summer, I went back to my part time labouring job with a comfy pair of 4.0’s on feet. Whilst throwing away some wood onto the burn pile I clearly wasn’t wearing appropriate footwear, as twenty minutes later, I pulled out a 10 cm nail lodged between the gaps in my sole. I looked up to see the faces of the three gentlemen who I was working with at the time, “That’s why we wear work boots mate”, they said unimpressed. I haven’t gone back to labouring since.

Nike’s 2004 Zvezdochka

The Fishnets were too late in the 2000s to belong to the Alpha Project Line up too. There was undoubtably inspiration drawn from Nike’s 2004 Zvezdochka, a modular designed shoe made up of four distinct parts. This was during Nike’s early 2000s exploration into techy and sustainable design. Whilst they were similar, they were no where near as flashy or techy. The bottom of the shoe was Free Run-esque in terms of its tread, but lacked the large splits between the pods which was essential part of the “free” aspect of its design.  

The plastic toe on the shoe is taken straight from the Presto which is a more obvious comparison. The shoe would basically be a Presto had it not been for the cage which surrounds the soft upper. The closest comparison I can think of is the Nike Air Kukini. Another shoe in the Alpha Project range, combining a soft and caged upper for extra support much like the pair I got from eBay. The difference between the two is obviously the exposed air unit and the melding between the two types of upper. On a side note, the Air Kukini is rumoured to be getting a rerelease this year after originally coming out in 2000.

Nike Air Kukini – pic from Sneaker News

Luckily, I remembered the old trick of typing in the serial code into google. Within milliseconds I saw my shoe pop up on screen. The Nike Air Rejuven8. An article from Sneaker News containing my colourway came up on images. Nike Air Rejuven8 – Summer 2010 Colorways was the name of the post. Considering the shoe label stated these were made in the first quarter of 08 suggested production on these may have been slightly more complicated. I must have scrolled past the Rejuven8 name on a website back in the day as the name does not seem totally alien to me. Another successful find on eBay from a decade-old, under-the-radar silhouette, good times!

Now I have the name and the story, I can walk around in them with a less confusion. I no longer had to worry about a sneaker enthusiast striking up a conversation on the pair wrapped around my feet. Name or not, what doesn’t change is that they’re comfy and easy to slip on, a key design feature which came out of the cosy era of lockdown. You may catch me in these post hike as a recovery shoe or even roaming round the concrete streets of a city providing 2K Nike innovation vibes. The shoe itself does fit in today’s climate of parachute pants and overly-water-repellent youths, so count me in (although considering they are already mine, that was a given).

A not-so far cry from the 3D printed shoes of today, there are futuristic elements present within the Rejuven8. One comparison that comes to mind is the Zellerfeld shoe which is currently gaining a large fanbase. Both shoes have taken the traditional leather or synthetic upper and thrown it out the window, opting for a more breathable and ergonomic feel. The collab between Heron Preston and Zellerfeld is heading towards the right direction in terms of the sustainability and flipping the script on the traditional idea of the shoe. I would not be surprised the Nike Air Rejuven8 was up on the first set of mood boards for the Zellerfeld shoe, a passing of the baton in futuristic design.

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