Double Tap to Zoom
adidas
1 / 6

The adidas Grisedale SPZL sneaker may have just come straight out of the archive but it looks brand new. The adidas SPZL line continues to mine the brand’s rich design history under the direction of Gary Aspden, pulling out shoe silhouettes that feel both familiar and fresh.

The Grisedale SPZL takes cues from classic outdoor and trail footwear, updated with substantial materials and small design touches like antique-style lace hooks and contrast stitching.

The upper mixes smooth leather and suede in a palette of deep browns and greens, balanced by antique-style eyelets and an embroidered Trefoil on the side. The nods to hiking heritage are obvious but this is a casual all-season shoe that doesn’t pretend it’s meant for summits.

SPZL, a stylized abbreviation for “special,” is adidas’ in-house line dedicated to modernizing archival designs for everyday wear.

Your Highsnobiety privacy settings have blocked this YouTube video.

Each release feels like a love letter to old-school styling, gently innovating by only lightly updating the classics. Less hype, more about getting the details right.

Compared to technical lines like Terrex, the Grisedale feels grounded in the everyday, timeless in the way only well-made shoes can be and built from materials that age better the more you wear them.

Available this fall on for $180 adidas’ website as part of the SPZL Fall/Winter 2025 collection, the Grisedale SPZL shoe sits comfortably alongside retro adidas sneakers like the Lytham and Munchen II. Together, they mark another strong season for Aspden’s vision of adidas: nostalgic, elevated, and effortlessly wearable.

Highsnobiety has affiliate marketing partnerships, which means we may receive a commission from your purchase. Want to shop the products our editors actually love? Visit the HS Style Guide for recs on all things fashion, footwear, and beauty.

We Recommend
  • This Furry, Scaly Samba Is a Beast of Its Own
  • adidas’ Mossy Green Sneaker Is No Samba, and That’s the Point
  • adidas’ Pink Mary Jane Is Its Most Ballet-y Ballerina Sneaker Yet
  • adidas’ Sweet Vanilla-Flavored Loafer Is a Dressy Dessert
What To Read Next
  • Why This Big Baggy Brand Keeps Selling Out
  • New Balance’s Nuttiest Dad Shoe Is Too Delicious for Its Own Good
  • adidas’ Slickest Slipper Sneaker Strikes Gold
  • Supreme’s New Shoe Has an Actual Job History
  • Nike’s Creamiest Runner Doesn't Need Laces to Be Fly
  • Patrick Dempsey Channels the Ethos of Jack Heuer