In the landscape of sneaker culture, few alliances feel as electrifying and meaningful as the one between Nike and NIGO. One brings the legacy of the Swoosh — icons, archive, sport meets lifestyle. The other, a Japanese visionary: from founding A Bathing Ape to shaping streetwear’s DNA worldwide. Together, they don’t just collab — they curate culture.
NIGO’s introduction to Nike in 2024 marked the genesis of something both bold and archival: the debut launch of the Nike × NIGO partnership featured the once-quiet silhouette of the Air Force III, re-interpreted with a layered understanding of pop-culture, cinema, music and aesthetic memory.
Fast-forward to 2025, and the dialogue invests even deeper: the triple collab with Levi’s. This isn’t a “two brands + designer” gimmick — it feels like a confluence of cultural legacies: Nike’s archive, Levi’s heritage, and NIGO’s lens.
Levi’s = denim, Americana, workwear turned wardrobe staple. Nike = athletic archive, streetwear pillar, innovation. NIGO sits at their intersection: he collects references, digests heritage, re-presents. The Instagram-ready “vintage” effect of stone-washed denim meets suede panels, pre-yellowed midsoles and subtle branding makes the shoe feel lived-in (and yet exclusive) right out of the box.
The choice of the Air Force 3 Low for this release is meaningful. A silhouette from 1988 with strong bones, largely under-celebrated compared to the AF1 or AJ1, but rich for reinterpretation. This provides the canvas — NIGO uses it to layer denim panels, vintage tones, subtle Levi’s cues (the red tab, the cowboy ad graphic insole) — giving the sneaker narrative depth.
Look closer: stone-washed denim base, suede overlays, metallic Swoosh highlights, pre-yellowed midsoles that evoke aged leather and well-worn jeans. Every detail acts like a stitch in the story of time lived in — a shoe that feels like it’s been part of your wardrobe for years, even if you just unboxed it.
NIGO has always mined culture — music, film, raw references — and presented it through his archive lens. This collab ties that archive to two brands with decades of their own stories. It’s a designer remix, yes — but one that honors the roots instead of erasing them. Nike’s press release about the Nike × NIGO partnership emphasized this: referencing pop culture, archives, and a long-term journey.
At Noirfonce, this is exactly the kind of release we celebrate: where style meets substance, and culture meets craft. If you’re looking to bring something into your space that speaks to a broader narrative — this is it.
Although the Levi's collection might be sold out, check out the rest of the drops that are still available here.

