Dec 28, 2009, reebok has published his new Court Vuctory Pump at the Agenda Trade show.
You can see this pump in these photos, the black is covering the most of the upper, while the bottom is white midsole.
The laces and the heel patch are in yellow, wich make it very beautifull.
If you ask about the focal point of the shoe, then I should say it can be found on the heel, just above the midsole. Then, the Yellow speckling is splattered across a black base and it creates somewhat of a starry sky effect.
I think you can expect this Pump to circulate around Reebok accounts in the Fall.
This Reebok pump is almost the most beautifull for guys, black, white and yellow !!
That's what called the Reebok Court Victory Pump.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Reebok Pumps - Pump it up !
The Reebok Pump is a line of athletic shoes that was popular in the early 1990s. It was that time the only shoe that have an internal inflation mechanism that regulates an unique fitting cushion in the upper tongue.
Now there is two competitors for the Reebok Pumps. The first is the LA Gear Regulators and the second is ofcourse Nike Air Pressure. Nike does use a similar inflation mechanism in their "Shox" models available as basketball or cross-training sneakers.
A little of history:
The Reebok Pump was was released in 1989, as a basketball high-top shoe. It was made as a collaboration between Reebok's Paul Litchfield and the Continuum. The shoe was quite expensive compared to other retail athletic shoes at the time. It became fastly something of a status symbol on urban basketball courts as well as suburban high schools.
After the success of the basketball shoe, Reebok designed pump shoes for football, tennis, and track. But for weight considerations, they used a standard CO2 cylinder instead of the pump in some models.
Reebok Pumps Photos:
Now there is two competitors for the Reebok Pumps. The first is the LA Gear Regulators and the second is ofcourse Nike Air Pressure. Nike does use a similar inflation mechanism in their "Shox" models available as basketball or cross-training sneakers.
A little of history:
The Reebok Pump was was released in 1989, as a basketball high-top shoe. It was made as a collaboration between Reebok's Paul Litchfield and the Continuum. The shoe was quite expensive compared to other retail athletic shoes at the time. It became fastly something of a status symbol on urban basketball courts as well as suburban high schools.
After the success of the basketball shoe, Reebok designed pump shoes for football, tennis, and track. But for weight considerations, they used a standard CO2 cylinder instead of the pump in some models.
Reebok Pumps Photos: