{"id":792878,"date":"2019-04-29T13:58:21","date_gmt":"2019-04-29T17:58:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/?p=792878"},"modified":"2019-04-29T13:57:02","modified_gmt":"2019-04-29T17:57:02","slug":"tom-sachs-nike-mars-yard-overshoe-is-the-ultimate-artist-sneaker","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.snkrsday.com\/tom-sachs-nike-mars-yard-overshoe-is-the-ultimate-artist-sneaker\/","title":{"rendered":"Tom Sachs x Nike Mars Yard Overshoe Gets a Release Date"},"content":{"rendered":"
Tom Sachs<\/strong> is a true artist in every sense of the word. He’s simultaneously patient and impatient. He always seems up against it, yet free-flowing\u00a0as if the concept of completion is foreign to him. Since 2012, when Sachs produced his very-first Nike product through the duo’s NikeCraft collaborative imprint, the prolific artist has been in high-demand in sneaker culture — often times primarily as a creative mind as opposed to someone who could and subsequently would release a product.<\/p>\n Then there was the official release of his Nike Mars Yard Shoe 2.0 last year. With few other sneakers more desirable over the past decade, Sachs, unlike just about anyone else, resides in sneaker lore with only one true release. That number doubles with the impending release of his Nike Mars Yard Overshoe<\/strong>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Conceptually, Sachs’ sequel serves one central thesis. The shoe is meant to combat inclement weather, chiefly the chilly months of winter. “The Mars Yard Overshoe, its nickname is the March Yard \u2014 for March, the worst month of the year. It is wet, your feet are wet the whole month of March,” says Sachs. But that foundational principle is only the top layer for what Sachs has created. And, in part, a surface philosophy for a much richer story achieved through collaboration.<\/p>\n “NIKECraft is an adjective,” says Sachs. “It means a combination of things only Nike can produce and things only Sachs can produce. It is fifty-fifty. It is an aesthetic of transparency.”<\/p>\n Like many great artists before him, Sachs learns by doing; trial and error has become his deserved path to success. With the Mars Yard Overshoe, Sachs tested varying materials and the limits of their functionality. Further, his depth of understanding, or better, curiosity, extends not only to functionality but how long these things will function. Sachs attributes Nike’s endless rope to his ability to think and subsequently create without boundaries.<\/p>\n