JACQUEMUS NIKE MOON SHOE DROPS SPRING 2026 FOR $180
By Chief Editor | 2/24/2026
Jacquemus and Nike release three new spring 2026 colorways of their Moon Shoe collaboration, featuring Pale Pink, Medium Brown, and White versions with crinkled nylon construction and waffle outsoles. The $180 sneakers continue the partnership that began in 2022 and marks the first redesign of Nike's original 1972 Moon Shoe.
Key Points
- First redesign of Nike's original 1972 Moon Shoe that sold for $437,500 at auction in 2019
- Fourth collaboration between Jacquemus and Nike following Air Max 1, J Force 1, and Air Humara
- Only 12 original Moon Shoes were hand-made by Geoff Hollister in 1972 for Olympic Trials
Bill Bowerman hand-cobbled 12 pairs of the Moon Shoe for the 1972 Olympic Trials. Today, one sells for $437,500 at auction. Now Simon Porte Jacquemus gets to reinterpret the most historically significant sneaker in Nike's vault, and the result is three colorways that prove heritage doesn't need to whisper.
The Pale Pink, Medium Brown, and White drops launching spring 2026 at $180 each are not retreads. Jacquemus has kept the waffle tread pattern that Bowerman literally invented by pouring rubber into his kitchen appliance, but he's wrapped it in ruched nylon and full-grain leather. The silhouette now reads like a ballet flat that happens to have Olympic DNA. That tonal shift matters: slim, low-profile sneakers are exploding in popularity right now, and the Moon Shoe's torpedo profile slots perfectly into that moment.
This is the fourth Jacquemus-Nike collaboration since June 2022. Each one has followed the same formula: take an athletic relic, strip it to its most elegant lines, add Parisian minimalism, and price it at the intersection of collector culture and fashion gatekeeping. It works because Jacquemus understands something most collaborators miss: heritage doesn't need updating. It needs translation.
The original Moon Shoe earned its name from the crater-like imprints it left on track surfaces, a nod to 1969's moon landing. Jacquemus' version keeps that visual vocabulary but speaks contemporary. The tongue tag, heel counter, sockliner, and outsole all carry the Jacquemus signature without screaming it. Blue Ribbon Sports branding appears on the co-branded packaging, a deliberate callback to Nike's earliest identity.
The broader pattern here is worth tracking: luxury fashion is now mining the deep athletic archives instead of surface-level collaborations. When a brand like Jacquemus can command $180 for a reinterpreted 1972 racing shoe and justify it through minimalism rather than celebrity, something has shifted. The collector market already validated it. An original unworn pair sold for $437,500. The contemporary version won't hit that, but it will move fast enough to matter.
Topics: jacquemus, nike, moon shoe, collaboration, sneakers, fashion, heritage, focus-49-84