miércoles, 10 de junio de 2009

adidas Originals Nizza 2 Hi´s X Jeremy Scott.

adidas-jeremy-scott-fw09-nizza-hi

Después de Mostrarte las Botas de Nieve de la línea adidas Originals de Jeremy Scott. Ahora te mostramos un vistazo de dos Nizza 2 Hi´s.

Coincidiendo con el tema de África de la colección, uno de los Nizza Hi´s vienen con un exclusivo diseño Kente Cloth en toda la parte superior (Cabe aclarar, que este diseño a sido originalmente realizado por artesanos especializados en Ghana y Togo, y ahora adidas lo toma como inspiración), y el otro viene con un diseño de Mapa del Mundo para coincidir con algunos de los vestuarios de la colección.

Te dejamos que les des un mejor vistazo.



2 comentarios:

Unknown dijo...

How Adidas Stole from AFRICA

If Adidas wants to borrow inspiration from AFRICA then they should pay up or Give Credit Where due – This is my letter to adidas with regards to the misspelling of the word ‘KENTE’ and lack of ascribing the origin of the cloth use in their African Inspired ‘KENTA” Nizza 2 Hi sneakers

Hi i noted that for a while now Adidas has been doing the materials of the world special edition shoes and clothing. I think this is lovely and commend adidas for this.
As an African Designer I was also extremely excited by the release of Jeremey Scotts Africa Themed apparel. I was excited when i saw the African Inspired Nizza 2 Hi sneakers however i was saddened by the wrong description of the material used. The Adidas description stated that it was a unique ‘kenta’ cloth. Unfortunately Adidas has got it all wrong the cloth used on the shoe in question is actually the ‘kente’ cloth and not the ‘kenta’ cloth as has been published in all materials pertaining to the shoes.

This lack of respect for the name and history of Ghana’s national cloth shows how little research and consideration was taking in fashioning or mimicking this shoe as an authentic African product.

Kente is the trendiest and most renowned cloth in Ghana and possibly in all of Africa. The strip-woven cloth made by the Akan people of Ghana and the Ewe people of Ghana and Togo, is the best known of all African textiles. Its fame has spread globally where it is now one of the most admired of all fabrics in many parts of the world.

Africa as it is a misunderstood, over exploited and misrepresented continent – If conglomerates like adidas wish to take inspiration from African art and textiles for their products the least you could do was provide an accurate historical description of the ‘borrowed’ design.

The country of origin of the kente design was not published.
Kente has been woven for centuries on looms by skilled artisans in Ghana and Togo – these designs are the daily bread of these Africans and the intellectual property of these artists and Nations as a whole.

I am certain Adidas will not be happy if a small shoe and clothing factory in Ghana decided to utilise the Trefoil logo and the 3 – Stripes mark on their make shift line.

So why is it that the culture and intellectual property of whole nations can be misrepresented by such a big company without and regard for the originators of the design.

I would appreciate it if the name of the shoe could be corrected and the design origins of the material could be rightfully ascribed to its originators. I am sure this is either a typographical mistake or just a slight oversight as a company with such a rich history will not intentionally misrepresent the whole continent of AFRICA.
thanks for your attention
P.S No Africans were plagiarized in the making of this letter.
Kwabena Boateng

Unknown dijo...

How Adidas Stole from AFRICA

If Adidas wants to borrow inspiration from AFRICA then they should pay up or Give Credit Where due – This is my letter to adidas with regards to the misspelling of the word ‘KENTE’ and lack of ascribing the origin of the cloth use in their African Inspired ‘KENTA” Nizza 2 Hi sneakers

Hi i noted that for a while now Adidas has been doing the materials of the world special edition shoes and clothing. I think this is lovely and commend adidas for this.
As an African Designer I was also extremely excited by the release of Jeremey Scotts Africa Themed apparel. I was excited when i saw the African Inspired Nizza 2 Hi sneakers however i was saddened by the wrong description of the material used. The Adidas description stated that it was a unique ‘kenta’ cloth. Unfortunately Adidas has got it all wrong the cloth used on the shoe in question is actually the ‘kente’ cloth and not the ‘kenta’ cloth as has been published in all materials pertaining to the shoes.

This lack of respect for the name and history of Ghana’s national cloth shows how little research and consideration was taking in fashioning or mimicking this shoe as an authentic African product.

Kente is the trendiest and most renowned cloth in Ghana and possibly in all of Africa. The strip-woven cloth made by the Akan people of Ghana and the Ewe people of Ghana and Togo, is the best known of all African textiles. Its fame has spread globally where it is now one of the most admired of all fabrics in many parts of the world.

Africa as it is a misunderstood, over exploited and misrepresented continent – If conglomerates like adidas wish to take inspiration from African art and textiles for their products the least you could do was provide an accurate historical description of the ‘borrowed’ design.

The country of origin of the kente design was not published.
Kente has been woven for centuries on looms by skilled artisans in Ghana and Togo – these designs are the daily bread of these Africans and the intellectual property of these artists and Nations as a whole.

I am certain Adidas will not be happy if a small shoe and clothing factory in Ghana decided to utilise the Trefoil logo and the 3 – Stripes mark on their make shift line.

So why is it that the culture and intellectual property of whole nations can be misrepresented by such a big company without and regard for the originators of the design.

I would appreciate it if the name of the shoe could be corrected and the design origins of the material could be rightfully ascribed to its originators. I am sure this is either a typographical mistake or just a slight oversight as a company with such a rich history will not intentionally misrepresent the whole continent of AFRICA.
thanks for your attention
P.S No Africans were plagiarized in the making of this letter.
Kwabena Boateng