The History of Cool: Balenciaga ‘Triple S’ Trainers
When Octogenarian Hypebeast scholars at Google University, Oxford, (trust us, it’ll happen) look back at the current trend for ‘fugly’ trainers, they will note that one particular pair above all else had a lasting, profound impact on the footwear choices of the modern, post-Brexit man. Demna Gvasalia (he of Balenciaga and Vetements fame) is a designer who has shaped modern silhouettes and provoked style debates more than perhaps any other creative in the past three years.
When the trainer finally dropped in September 2017, the style junkies went tonto
When other creatives or well-tailored luxury CEOs discuss things like ‘disruption’, to whom they are really referring is Gvasalia, or certainly his trademarked aesthetic: taking classic staples such as the ubiquitous hoodie, a pair of normcore dad jeans, even a long-sleeved T-shirt and adding his own genius design glitches. Gvasalia’s take on ‘fashion’ sneakers – the Balenciaga ‘Triple S’ trainer, first shown in Pairs in January 2017 – is quite simply the coolest, most provocative artefact to come off the menswear catwalk in modern times. (And if you’ve ever been to a Craig Green show that’s saying something.) The ‘Triple S’ is Patient Zero for a luxury shoe industry now worth hundreds of millions of dollars; they are the Nike Air Jordan’s, or Reebok Classics of their time.
There have, of course, been wide-soled ‘ugly’ trainers before. As a skater myself back in the Nineties – and by ‘skater’ what I really mean is I owned a skateboard and subscribed to Thrasher magazine rather than being any good on a plywood ramp and four wheels – I remember a brand named ‘Nose’. They marketed their shoes as something a punk would play golf in: huge, barge-wide white soles that made the wearer look like a children’s entertainer, or a cross-country skier. The ‘Triple S’ is also a hybrid: part running shoe, part hiking boot, the sole appears to be made from three separate sneakers, all having been ‘melted’ into one multi-layered puddle of rubber. The effect is of a trainer that appears to be multiplying from the bottom, down. It’s a mille-feuille of a shoe. A shoe that comes ‘pre-scuffed’ – how’s that for trainers as high art?