Vans recently took over LA to celebrate the legacy of the Old Skool, blending skateboarding, music, and culture in one immersive event. The brand opened its archives, offering a glimpse into the history that shaped the shoe’s roots as a bonafide skate staple and cultural icon.
The event bridged generations, featuring legends like Henry Rollins of Black Flag and skate pioneer Tony Alva alongside rising talents like hip-hop group Paris Texas and bespoke customizer Nicole McLaughlin. This collision of past and present sets the stage for Vans’ new capsule collections – reimagining the Premium Old Skool with archival details, modern skate upgrades, and colorways inspired by the prevailing aesthetics of three pivotal eras.
Let’s dial it back to 1977. Los Angeles is experiencing an unprecedented drought, but the city’s well of creative gold is anything but dry. Punk bands are taking over house parties, and a collective out of Santa Monica’s Dogtown is making waves in more ways than one.
Tony Alva, Stacy Peralta, Jay Adams, and other Z-Boys have translated their unique surfing styles to skateboarding. The city’s lack of water means that empty swimming pools are everywhere, allowing the team’s pioneering vertical skateboarding style to flourish and redefine the sport. They’re wearing Vans, and while they all have a vision, they probably haven’t yet grasped the impact they’re going to have on the sneaker industry.
“Skateboarders, especially professionals, we were considered the little bastard stepchild of the whole shoe industry,” says Alva. “But that’s where the Van Dorens had foresight, you know what I mean. Steve was like, god, these kids are cool and we need to make shoes for them.”
Following the success of the Style 95, Vans introduced another game-changer in 1977: the Style 36. Later anointed the Old Skool, the shoe debuted the now-iconic sidestripe; a simple doodle by founder Paul Van Doren that evolved into a symbol of skate culture and beyond.
The Old Skool would quickly become a symbol of counterculture for reasons that weren’t forced, but naturally came to be. Skating rock stars and music-obsessed skaters were there from the very beginning, thus birthing a style that continues to thrive at the intersection of both worlds.
Now nearly fifty years and countless tweaks later, not to mention new models like the Knu Skool, Vans is breathing new life into the 1977-born icon yet again with a series of Premium Old Skool capsules inspired by its indelible mark on skate and music.
First things first: the Premium Old Skool comes with a ton of skate-minded upgrades. The updated model is anchored by recycled materials and 30% biobased Sola Foam ADC insoles for all-day cushioning and improved comfort. As far as archival touches go, the shoe features glossy sidewalls, higher foxing tape, and throwback branding on the heel.
The inaugural capsule tributes the era the Old Skool grew up in with original red and royal blue colorways and a bold leopard print design reminiscent of the 70s punk aesthetics. The Vans archive contains an awfully similar pair of custom 45s from the early 70s, which were commissioned during a time when Vans would let people design their own shoes with unique fabrics.
The third and final capsule pays homage to 2010s hip-hop, showcasing pastel colorways on gum soles that capture the era’s dominant streetwear vibe along Fairfax Ave.
Each capsule will roll out in-store and online via vans.com over the coming months. The punk capsule releases on February 6th, the Warped Tour capsule drops March 6th, and the hip-hop capsule arrives on April 10th.