JONATHAN ANDERSON JUST TROLLED SNEAKER HEADS WITH DIOR
By FINALLY OFFLINE | 1/14/2026
The Dior Roadie is basically a $1,200 Nike Considered boot from 2005, remixed with suede and Dior's cannage pattern. Anderson's playing a different game than Kim Jones—less 'luxury Dunk,' more 'obscure Nike lore for sneaker archaeologists'.
Key Points
- The Dior Roadie is basically a $1,200 Nike Considered boot from 2005, remixed with suede and Dior's cannage pattern
- Anderson's playing a different game than Kim Jones—less 'luxury Dunk,' more 'obscure Nike lore for sneaker archaeologists'
- Nike Considered was ahead of its time (glue-free, sustainable, designed by Tinker Hatfield) and died in the early 2010s. Anderson just resurrected it.
Jonathan Anderson just made his first Dior sneaker and it's a certified deep cut. The Roadie looks like someone took a 2005 Nike Considered boot, hit it with a suede moccasin makeover, and slapped Dior's $1,200 tax on it. Most people will see a weird flat-soled boot. Sneaker nerds will see a direct archive raid. That two-piece sole unit? Stolen from Nike's forgotten Considered line. The hairy suede vamp? Same construction. Anderson's not being subtle—he's flexing.
This is the anti-Kim Jones move. For seven years, Kim Jones made Dior sneakers that felt like luxury versions of things you already knew: B23s (luxe Chuck Taylors), Dior x Jordan 1s, Birkenstock clogs. Safe bets. Anderson is doing the opposite. He's mining obscure Nike history and betting that Dior's audience is cultured enough to catch the reference. It's a play for credibility with the 0.1% of sneaker heads who actually know Nike Considered existed.
Here's the wild part: Nike Considered was supposed to be the future. Launched in 2005 with Tinker Hatfield and a crew of heavyweight designers, it was Nike's sustainability play—glue-free, recyclable, forward-thinking. Too forward-thinking. It died quietly in the early 2010s because the world wasn't ready. Anderson just proved it was ahead of its time by making it luxury. That's not a coincidence. That's a thesis statement: Dior under Anderson is hunting for forgotten good ideas and making them relevant again.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Dior Roadie sneaker and how much does it cost?
The Dior Roadie is Jonathan Anderson's first Dior sneaker, priced at $1,200, designed as a modern remix of the 2005 Nike Considered boot with suede and Dior's cannage pattern applied to the silhouette.
What was Nike Considered and when was it launched?
Nike Considered was a sustainability-focused sneaker line launched in 2005 by Nike with designer Tinker Hatfield, featuring glue-free and recyclable construction that was ahead of its time but discontinued in the early 2010s.
How is Jonathan Anderson's approach different from Kim Jones' Dior sneaker designs?
Anderson mines obscure Nike history with deep-cut references like the Considered line, while Kim Jones focused on luxury remixes of well-known silhouettes like the B23 and Jordan 1 over his seven-year tenure at Dior.
Who designed the original Nike Considered line?
The Nike Considered line was designed by Tinker Hatfield and a team of heavyweight designers when it launched in 2005.
Why did Anderson choose to base the Dior Roadie on the Nike Considered boot?
Anderson's choice reflects his thesis that Dior under his direction hunts for forgotten good ideas and makes them relevant again, proving the Considered line was ahead of its time by elevating it to luxury status.
Topics: sneakers