adidas Arosa Sleek

Color: White, Gold, Red

Material: Leather, Synthetic

Rating: Add Your Review

Style #: 014691

Category: Boots

$ 200.00 $ 109.99

ZOOM
Click an image to get a larger view

Social Sharing

WIDTH


adidas Arosa Sleek Details
  • The full-grain leather upper is durable and water-resistant, ensuring your feet keep warm and dry while looking good
  • Synthetic fur-lining is toasty, fashionable, and animal-friendly
  • Suede/fur combination layering provides additional warmth
  • Heavy-duty rubber outsole is long lasting and designed for maximum traction on slippery surfaces
  • Attractive, versatile design works well with all varieties of winter apparel
  • Boot is approximately 11 5 inches tall, rising high to comply with the latest fashion trends and to give your legs an extra layer of warmth
adidas Arosa Sleek Description

Sometimes you actually want to walk through the winter wonderland and stop in the woods on those snowy evenings. When you get those urges, you'll be glad you've got the adidas Arosa Sleek women's boots. Based on the classic Arosa boot style, the adidas Arosa Sleek adapt that same great look to a sturdier platform with a high-traction outsole designed for the trail. Ideal for the fashionable forest fiend, you get the distinctive style and warm construction of the Arosa with the added grip you need for exploring in the snow-blanketed great outdoors.

Sure, the adidas Arosa Sleek will look great in the lodge, but sometimes you get tired of watching the snow fall through the foggy picture window and want to actually get out into the white wonderful, slippery stuff. The Arosa Sleek understands those urges, even encourages them. Feel free to leave all those lodge loungers in their lame slick-soled boots behind and go play in the snow.

Recently viewed items in your Locker

You might also like

  • Converse All Star Light Ankle Mid - 512471
    Converse

    All Star Light Ankle Mid

    $ 61.99
  • adidas Response Cushion 17 - 990616
    adidas

    Response Cushion 17

    $ 84.99
  • adidas Missy Elliot Remix 3 Stripe - 103997
    adidas

    Missy Elliot Remix 3 Stripe

    $ 120.00 $ 37.99
  • Keen Shay - 5453-SLBN
    Keen

    Shay

    $ 79.99
  • Converse All Star Deluxe - 5V851
    Converse

    All Star Deluxe

    $ 70.00 $ 34.99
  • adidas Campus II - 047100
    adidas

    Campus II

    $ 65.00 $ 37.99
  • Brand History
    adidas

    Since he first equipped a pair of canvas trainers with spikes in 1920, Adolph "Adi" Dassler, founder of adidas, developed a reputation for cutting-edge designs and his groundbreaking use of new materials and creative ideas in the pursuit of making the best possible track shoes. His reputation would soon extend to making the best sport-specific shoes for other sports as well.

    In 1925, Dassler, a soccer fan, began manufacturing the first pair of cleats for the sport, and in 1931 he developed tennis shoes. By the end of the decade, Dassler was manufacturing 30 different shoes for 11 sports. The company's first major success came in 1932 at the Olympics in Los Angeles when German runner Arthur Jonath won bronze in the 100m while wearing a pair of Dassler's shoes. This was the first of many Olympic medals won by athletes in Dassler footwear. In 1936, Jesse Owens famously won four gold medals in Dassler shoes at the Olympics in Berlin. By the time the Olympics returned to Los Angeles in 1984, 124 of the 140 competing nations and a total of 259 medal winners were outfitted in adidas.

    The real turning point that took adidas from a rising national brand to a worldwide phenomenon came on July 4, 1954. The Hungarian team had a harder time than expected in the World Cup's final game. The heavily favored Hungarians came into this game on a 32-game winning streak. They previously defeated their opponents, West Germany, 8-3 in the tournament's first round. On the rain-drenched field at Wankdorf Stadium in Bern, Switzerland, this game began exactly as the odds makers had predicted-- Hungary scored two goals within the match's first eight minutes. The underdogs fought back, however, and by halftime, the Germans had tied the score and revealed their secret weapon-- a 53 year-old World War I veteran and baker-turned-shoemaker named Adolph Dassler.

    The West German team was wearing adidas shoes; a fledgling brand of shoe still largely unknown outside of Germany, and Dassler accompanied his shoes to the game. During halftime, Dassler had the Germans attach screw-in spikes to the soles of their shoes to get better traction on the soggy turf. In the second half, the West German team scored again and kept the Hungarians away from the goal for a 3-2 victory. In German football folklore, this upset is known as "The Miracle of Bern," and in many ways marked the international debut of adidas, a footwear and athletic apparel company soon to be known for its cutting-edge innovation in both fashion and technology.

    As the 20th century progressed, adidas footwear became a pop culture icon sported by superstars from Muhammad Ali to David Beckham and was name-checked in hit songs by Run DMC and Korn.

    Adolph Dassler, holder of 700 footwear design patents and pioneer of athletics-changing features such as spikes and nylon construction died in 1978, but adidas continues his legacy of innovation. Cutting-edge fashion lines from designer Stella McCartney, technological breakthroughs such as the adidas 1 line with electronically adjusted dynamic cushioning, recent contracts to provide apparel to NBA players and equipment and footwear to the athletes in the 2008 Beijing Olympics ensure that the adidas name will have a prominent place in countless sports legends to come.