A community-built record of the sneakers that matter. A few quick things before you dive in.
2004
Top@nickengvall OfficialFounding
@nickengvall OfficialSign in to add your photo of this pair.
The Nike Air Max 90 ‘Bacon’ is one of the more storied premium colorways to come out of Nike’s mid-2000s push toward elevated materials on its retro running catalog. Released in 2004, the shoe draws its nickname from the color palette itself, a combination of light grey suede on the mudguard and toe, dark crimson red nubuck on the quarter panel and heel, a bubblegum pink leather Swoosh, and cream leather on the collar, all of which loosely evoke the tones of cooked bacon. The brown-toned waffle outsole and ribbed midsole sidewall reinforce the warm, earthy palette rather than contrasting it. The heel Air unit, which tends to oxidize to a deep amber or reddish-brown on aged specimens, only deepens the thematic read of the shoe over time. Nike kept the branding understated, with a debossed Air Max logo on the lateral midfoot panel and no extraneous co-branding. The result was a shoe that felt premium without being loud, sitting comfortably alongside other well-regarded single-colorway AM90 releases of the same era. Deadstock and lightly used pairs remain consistently sought after in the secondary market, particularly examples where the Air unit oxidation has settled into a rich, deep tone that aligns with the rest of the upper.
Drop your email to keep browsing the full archive. It is free, this just keeps the bots out and the archive in the hands of real sneakerheads.
Want to contribute and earn badges? Create a free account · Sign in