nike tennis shoes make your own

CUSTOMIZE NIKE SHOES WITH NIKEiD NIKEiD allows you to customize Nike shoes for performance, fit, and style. Visit NIKEiD to view all customizable products. WHICH NIKE SHOES CAN I CUSTOMIZE? NIKEiD offers multiple shoe styles and products for customization. Nike doesn't accept customer-submitted shoes or products for customization. WHICH PARTS OF SHOES CAN I CUSTOMIZE? Options vary by style. Customization options usually include colors of various components and a Personalized iD (PiD). Material, feature, and fit options are also available on many styles. HOW DO I CUSTOMIZE NIKEiD SHOES? Once you select an eligible style, follow the steps in the NIKEiD builder. When you select an option, the picture of the product will update to reflect your choice. HOW DO I ENTER A PERSONALIZED iD? You can add a Personalized iD (PiD) to most NIKEiD products. The number of characters varies by style. Enter your PiD in the iD field, and hover over the field to view the characters allowed for the product you selected.

The price depends on the product selected and is clearly displayed on the product page. The price listed includes all customization costs. CAN I RETURN A NIKEiD ORDER? Yes, please see the NIKEiD return policy. FAQ Feedback – How can we improve this answer? Speed and support for game day domination A retro look with a modern attitude The epitome of street style A collision of athletic and everyday style You're headed to the US Site... Pricing and product availability may change. View all Design Your Own Products NEW YORK—I just got to try on new Nikes that I never have to lace up, the futuristic sneaks Nike has been talking about for years. Unveiled to much hoopla at a New York event Wednesday, Nike HyperAdapt 1.0 has power-operated laces. As soon as you step into a pair — as if they were slip ons —and press a "+" button, the laces tighten. The shoe even lights up. The new shoe was unveiled by Nike CEO Mark Parker, along with a raft of other technologies.

They're expected out by the holiday season, but Nike hasn't announced pricing yet. Nike says the new shoe is "powered by an underfoot-lacing mechanism" — think tiny motor — and it "proposes a groundbreaking solution to individual idiosyncrasies in lacing." In other words, if your shoe laces frequently come untied, these have you covered. Nike has been talking about its self-tying shoes for over two years (and actually working on this technology for ten years). Movie-goers have been anticipating them for even longer: Marty McFly, the time-warped teenager played by Michael J. Fox in Back to the Future Part II, famously had self-tying shoes. Nike expects the shoe to come in various sizes and for multi-purposes. The size 10 shoes I got to wear briefly at the event indeed felt snug once I pushed the + button. When I was ready to pull them off, I pressed a "--" (minus) button and the fit relaxed making them easy to pull off. .@edbaig tries on the new @Nike HyperAdapt Trainer 1.0.

— Hadley Malcolm (@hadleypdxdc) March 16, 2016 The shoes are battery operated and use an inductive charge system and magnetic cup. It takes about three hours for a full charge. Nike says with average use you'll have to charge the battery every couple of weeks. A lighting system lets you know when you'll need to charge it. Which raised the question, what if the battery dies when you are ready to pull them off? Nike says you can easily pull them off as a low top shoe. At the event, Nike also unveiled a new version of the Nike + app, slated to launch in June, aimed at combining its Nike Training Club, Nike Running Club and retail apps into one, more personalized experience. Users will be able to shop, be notified of local Nike events and have access to personalized training programs and "on-demand coaching." The app experience differs based on a user's location, clothing and shoe sizes, and sport and lifestyle preferences, which they are prompted to enter when first setting up the app.

"Athletes want more than a dashboard," Parker said at the event. "They want a relationship." Contributing: AP and Hadley Malcolm Nike to unveil 'Back to the Future' self-tying power laces in 2015 More than a decade ago, shoe giant Nike came under fire for its use of sweatshop labor in the production of its products. Most of the criticism focused on its Indonesian workforce, where workers, largely young women, were forced to labor under harsh conditions and abusive supervisors. In 1997, filmmaker Michael Moore made Nike’s abuses a subject of his film “The Big One,” and met with Nike CEO Phil Knight. Knight explained that the reason his company was using low-wage labor in Indonesia is because “Americans don’t want to make shoes.” In 2001, following protests by labor and human rights advocates, Nike pledged a series of reforms following the revelation that some of its developing world workers were children. But a new investigation conducted by the Associated Press appears to find that poor conditions persist in many of Nike’s factories.

At the Taiwanese-operated Pou Chen Group factory in Sukabumi, Indonesia, which makes Converse shoes for Nike, and PT Amara Footwear factory in Jakarta, workers alleged that they are paid ultra-low wages, regularly verbally and physically abused, and even fired for the act of taking sick leave: The 10,000 mostly female workers at the Taiwanese-operated Pou Chen plant make around 50 cents an hour. That’s enough, for food and bunkhouse-type lodging, but little else. Some workers interviewed by the AP in March and April described being hit or scratched in the arm — one man until he bled. Others said they were fired after filing complaints. Mira Agustina, 30, said she was fired in 2009 for taking sick leave, even though she produced a doctor’s note. At the PT Amara Footwear factory located just outside Jakarta, where another Taiwanese contractor makes Converse shoes, a supervisor ordered six female workers to stand in the blazing sun after they failed to meet their target of completing 60 dozen pairs of shoes on time.