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The Reebok Instapump Fury OG is one of the most structurally distinctive running shoes ever produced, and this teal-and-coral inline colorway puts the silhouette’s architecture on full display. Steven Smith’s 1994 design dispensed with laces entirely in favor of a pneumatic fit system, and the pump bladder, embossed here with ‘Instapump’ lettering and finished with a white inflation button, remains the shoe’s defining functional and visual centerpiece.
The upper pairs a slate-blue textile base with deeper forest-teal overlays across the heel and toe, while coral-orange rubber hits occupy the vamp cage and heel counter, providing the high-contrast color blocking that has kept the Fury relevant across three decades of retro cycles. Black mesh underlays at the tongue and collar add depth, and the Reebok vector logo sits cleanly on the lateral forefoot in tonal teal. The midsole is pure white, split between fore and aft Hexalite pods bridged by an exposed GraphLite carbon-fiber arch plate, a construction detail that was radical at launch and reads as futuristic still. The outsole continues in white, its hexagonal lug geometry echoing the cushioning units above.
The Instapump Fury OG has been a consistent platform for both in-house colorway exploration and high-profile collaborations since its original release, and this teal-and-coral execution is a straightforward general-release option that lets the shoe’s geometry speak without the noise of a collaboration narrative.
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