Culture Nike Honors Indigenous Culture and Craft in New N7 Collection

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Nike Honors Indigenous Culture and Craft in New N7 Collection​

Featuring designs inspired by ancestral artwork and elements from Indigenous traditions.​

Inspired by traditions from Indigenous lands of prominent athletes like Lyle Thompson, Lauren Schad and Kyrie Irving, Nike (NYSE:NKE +1.10%)has released the new N7 Collection. Through footwear and apparel driven by the artistic traditions that come from the lands of Onondaga Nation to Cheyenne River Lakota Nation and Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Nike pays tribute to the athletes’ roots. Featuring thoughtful colors and materials to honor Indigenous cultures and craft, learn about the meaning behind the N7 Collection.

With a wide range of apparel and footwear, the Nike N7 Collection is designed to honor and embody the values, stories and diversity of Indigenous traditions and craft. Special regalia and ancestral artwork from each athlete’s Tribal Nation is incorporated into the shoes in the N7 Collection. For Thompson, the braided details of the N7 Nike Dunk Low pay homage to traditional hairstyles worn by the athlete and his brothers. The purple colorway is also a reference to the national flag of the Iroquois Confederacy. The N7 Nike Air Zoom Type has a colorway inspired by the medicine wheel– a Lakota cultural symbol representing balance and the four directions– and intricate porcupine quill art from Lauren Schad’s Tribe, the Cheyenne River Lakota Nation.
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The N7 Nike Kyrie Low 4 was inspired by a star quilt, a traditional art form of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, that Kyrie Irving was gifted during his naming ceremony. Featuring bright colors and a stitch detail graphic, this shoe is finished with embroidery inspired by hand-crafted techniques. Overall, the three footwear silhouettes include important personal design touches that relate to each athlete’s identity.
Throughout the N7 collection, the raw, neutral colors reflect the natural landscapes of Indigenous nations. The apparel in the N7 Collection adds an elemental connection to the land and respect to Indigenous traditions. Inside the clothing, a tag inspired by the colors of the medicine wheel reaffirms Nike’s commitment to supporting Indigenous youth.
The N7 Collection is now available in the U.S. and Canada at select Nike and Hibbett Sports retail locations and on Nike’s website.
Presented by Nike
 
N7? Someone call EA and let them know Nike is edging in on their Mass Effect franchise.
 
I guess the natives of Asia that bleed and die in sweat shops to produce this trash are all forgivable if you pander to a people who spend most of their days drinking excessively out of their garages on government gibs and blame whitey for them being shit at wars.
 
Somebody is going to get bigtime booty blasted about this, and I honestly don't blame them. Fuck the whole $100+ sneaker industry.
 
Takin the time to make pandering air jordans but still no highneck converse in orange smh tf they DOIN 🅱️
 
Pretty underwhelming design with the most tenuous connections (braids = native braided hair lmao), and did I mention the cons00m?

Could they not have integrated more native arts and craft elements, or are we stuck with symbolism now?

I mean, star quilts are pretty spectacular. If only there were a graphic element to emulate...

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Pretty underwhelming design with the most tenuous connections (braids = native braided hair lmao), and did I mention the cons00m?

Could they not have integrated more native arts and craft elements, or are we stuck with symbolism now?

I mean, star quilts are pretty spectacular. If only there were a graphic element to emulate...

View attachment 2315128View attachment 2315129
They had all these cool designs to work with and they choose an ugly color scheme that looks like something 2009 Chris Chan would come up with for his Sonichu OC.
 
Kindly ignore the fact that Nike still employs third-world sweatshop labor to make these overpriced wastes of practical footwear.
 
"Finally," thought the 6.79 million American Indians alive today, "an ugly piece of shit shoe made in a sweatshop for us. We will forego the Popov and scratchers for a few months and save up for this purple bullshit."
 
Any Kiwi's under 30 should watch and observe:

Basically, it's just a ploy for social media asspats. I will view this as legitimate when Nike executives give away 99% of their wealth and donate 2019 Corporate EARNINGS to be used to buy decent land for random Native Americans.

P.S. I the Injun version of this:
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Isn't this cultural appropriation?

This is how you can't win in this fight. If you're a white person and you support a native artists/company/branding etc by buying their creations and you then wear them everyone else is just gonna see a white person taking native culture. It's a no win situation because while people like to claim there's a different between cultural appreciation and appropriation, they don't see it that way. The view of the SJW types is very black and white. Which has a negative impact on craftspeople involved because why would people buy things they're gonna be demonized for wearing.
 
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