Nike’s ACG line elevates the label to the world of the most extreme technicality. The ACG collections are able to aim for the coolness of a technical and performing clothing, while remaining full of style and character. These concepts are perfectly in line with the gorpcore trend.
Gorpcore is a term coined by New York Magazine to indicate the tendency to wear technical and performing garments, intended for sporting activities such as those in the high mountains, directly in the metropolitan everyday life and therefore outside the context for which they were originally conceived.
The materials focus on the concept of sustainability, a concept on which the company has been developing new proposals for some time. In fact, 85% of the ACG Holiday 2020 line is made up of 90% recycled material, committed to reducing waste and emissions produced by the fashion industry.
The collection’s mother inspiration was Smith Rock, a natural rock structure near Nike’s global headquarters in Oregon.
Two new sneakers stand out within the line: the Nike ACG Mountain Fly GORE-TEX and the winter colorway of the Nike ACG Air Nasu GORE-TEX (designed for every type of surface).
The collection will be available November 12th on nike.com, including the Nike ACG Mountain Fly GORE-TEX which will be released on SNKRS, while the Nike ACG Air Nasu GORE-TEX colorway will be released on November 12 on the Nike App and nike. com.
You could be interested also in:
Nike Air Force 1 x Alyx Studio out now!
Nike ACG Air Zoom AO: all the info on the release
More from fashion
Children’s sandals? Take a look at the offer of the Primigi brand!
Sandals are a must in summer, and this doesn't just apply to adults. In fact, even children need to pamper …
Women’s bags: trendy models for S/S 2024
There is an accessory that returns as a protagonist every season, essential for enhancing the figure and making the outfit …
Loro Piana accused of not paying its indigenous workers in Peru
"Our excellence": this is the value proposition found on Loro Piana's official website under the "viçuna" section. And indeed, how could …