CLASSIC KICKS MAGAZINE VOLUME 2 | Page 63

John Migdal Why do you collect? I don’t have a magic answer; I just know that I can’t stop. I don’t have the cool Pacific North- west stories of going into garage sales of dudes who worked for Nike back in the 1980s. I don’t have the store in Spain that went bank- rupt but still had all these sneakers. Ninety-five percent of the shit I get is on eBay, which to me, isn’t a great story, but I’m fucking diligent about looking. What do you collect? For the most part, I collect 1979-1987. That’s my window. I have those Player Exclusives (PE) from the 1980s, and there are variations. Sometimes it’s just a colorway, like a purple Nike Legend, or something that is a player sample, but it doesn’t say “World B Free” on it. Then, there are the ones made for a particular team or player, so there’s a spectrum within the PE category. I probably only have around twenty pairs of basketball PEs. With the t-shirts, it’s orange Swoosh, Blue Label,and some Pinwheel. I don’t really collect the old runners that a lot of people do. They’re great and beautiful, but I never ran or looked at those early runners and coveted them. I grew up playing basketball, so my love of Nike comes with Air Jordan, but also with The Big East Tournament and seeing the big “Nike” on the back of Derrick Coleman’s shoes. What is it about that era of basketball sneakers that keeps you searching for them? The Jordan 1s are just so wearable. That’s the thing about collecting those early-to-mid 1980s basketball shoes. You can still wear them. They don’t have the midsoles that crumble. That came later on. I think there’s something about that Air Jordan 1 that’s kind of like the rookie card in baseball. It’s the first one, so you have to give it “X” amount of credit and credibility, but also there are all these crazy colors that weren’t in catalogs or released, and that doesn’t happen later on. So, like the metallic blues -- that was a release. You could get those, but my understanding is that certain schools with relationships to Nike were able to get some of the other colors. I’ve seen pictures of the Northwestern basketball team wearing the metallic purple ones, so who knows where the pairs were going? There’s still some mystery to Jordan 1s. You have the random colors, the lows, and tall tales of patent black leather with gold ones, and the Lakers color ones. That’s one of the first pictures I ever downloaded on the Internet. I still have it. Who has that shoe? Does somebody know? I don’t know. Can you tell me more about the t-shirts you collect and the significance of the label colors that you mentioned? The label helps define the era. Blue label is late 1983 to late 1986, but there’s some variation because of leftover supply. That time is right in my wheelhouse: the mid 1980s. So, that means all the original Air Jordan 1 “Wings” and over- the-shoulder shirts are on Blue Label. Orange Swoosh is the era right before that, which was from around 1979-1983. It’s not clear exactly. The beauty of many of these shirts is they aren’t production stamped. My t-shirt hunting has really picked up in the last five to eight years, and that’s three-fold. Typically, the shirts are more affordable than vintage sneakers, they take up less space, and frankly, they’re wearable. I was telling my friend the other day about collecting vintage Nike t-shirts and how there really are no catalogs. Sure, there are pamphlets, but there’s an indefi- nite number of Nike shirts that exist because there was so-and-so’s basketball camp or a 10k commemorative run. There’s those dudes in Volume 2 | classickicks.com | Classic Kicks | 63