Jordan 4 "Toro Bravo": Wheatpasted Heritage and Early Access
We don't just announce releases at Noirfonce. We believe in immersive storytelling, in weaving narratives directly into the physical and cultural architecture of our city. The impending drop of the iconic Air Jordan 4 "Toro Bravo" is not merely a date on a calendar; it is a moment that demands a statement as powerful and fearless as the crimson silhouette itself.
So, for this launch, we didn’t just design a graphic. We resurrected a Golden Age aesthetic and pasted it directly onto the streets of Madrid...and then pushed it even further, getting authorization for Early Access for our community, ahead of the long weekend.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Spanish advertising saw an explosion of artistic expression through traditional watercolor illustration. These posters weren’t just sales pitches; they were meticulously crafted pieces of art, defined by sophisticated brushwork, warm, textured color palettes, and a distinct hand-rendered charm. They captured motion, emotion, and local character with a unique, evocative elegance.
We saw a connection. The raw energy of the "Toro Bravo" colorway, its fierce crimson dominance, deserves more than clean digital lines. It demands depth. It demands soul.
Our creative team painstakingly recreated the launch poster, imagining a vintage advertisement for a modern masterpiece. The resulting design channels that very watercolor magic; detailed but imperfect brushstrokes, soft washes of textured red, modernized typography overlayed on the original artwork, and a stylized illustrative Jordan 4 graphic that crackles with life. Every bleed of the paint, every nuance of the illustrative line, is a deliberate nod to a time when art and promotion were seamlessly, beautifully combined. This is heritage design, curated for the modern collector.
But art should not be confined. It should live. It should interact.
We took these illustrated posters, printed on textured paper that mirrors the original aesthetic, and physically pasted them across the city of Madrid. This isn't high-gloss advertising; this is wheatpasting. Raw. Organic. Imperfect.
You won't find these posters on generic, well-manicured billboards. They are integrated directly into the fabric of Madrid's streets: clinging to weathered concrete walls in Malasaña, layered over peeling paint in Lavapiés, and peeking out from industrial scaffolding near our own space in Chamberí. The contrast between the delicate, nostalgic watercolor illustration and the gritty, unpolished textures of the urban environment creates a powerful visual narrative. The posters themselves will weather and peel, an organic evolution mirroring the street culture they celebrate. They are ephemeral interventions, transforming city corners into fleeting, unexpected galleries.
The posters are the invitation. The streets of Madrid have been subtly painted with illustrated crimson, and now it's time for the community to answer the call.
We are excited to announce Early Access for the Jordan 4 "Toro Bravo" on April 30th.
Consider this post your summons. If you’ve spotted a piece of illustrated heritage on your morning run, or simply crave a connection to both sneaker history and unique artistic activation, we hope to see you show up. This is curated reverence for design, executed with authenticity and local respect.
The Air Jordan 4 "Toro Bravo" is available via Early Access on April 30th at Casa Longinos: an OG restaurant known for their Spanish Tortilla: they have been around Since 1929 - no small feat.
So one last time, the Toro Bravo will be available at Casa Longinos on the 30th at 6PM. Show up and experience the fusion of art, street culture, and unparalleled design.
The wider online release will follow shortly after.


