Nike's Slippiest Sneaker Is Back and It's Sleeker Than Ever
The Air Superfly never really got its flowers. Designed in 2001 by Caprice Neely, one of Nike's few female designers at the time, it was built around a radical idea: strip everything back. No padding, no reinforcement, no fuss. Just a barefoot-like fit slim enough to land a Junya Watanabe Comme des Garçons collab at launch.
The sneaker world wasn't ready. It is now. And this time, Nike took the laces too.
The Air Superfly Moc takes the original's whole thing and doubles down. Perforations everywhere, lining gone, instep built from stretchy neoprene that moves with you rather than against you.
The result is something that sits somewhere between a sneaker, a slipper, and a very deliberate flex.
The burgundy colorway is doing quiet work, rich, tonal, unified from upper to sole. Then a single blue hit on the heel Swoosh shows up like it wasn't invited and somehow makes the whole thing better.
Slim sole, moc construction, and a silhouette that was always too good to be forgotten. Some shoes are just early. The Air Superfly Moc is proof.
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