Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Patches Ox

Color: Cream, Multi, White

Material: Textile

Rating: Add Your Review

Style #: 108842F

Category: Retro

$ 54.99

ZOOM
Click an image to get a larger view

Social Sharing


Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Patches Ox Details
  • Colorful fabric patches sewn to the canvas upper provide added uniqueness
  • Timeless Chuck Taylor All-Star design tweaked with low-top style
  • Internationally famous All-Star patch on tongue certifies authenticity
  • Classic comfort and versatility you expect from the Converse Chuck Taylor line
  • Low-top oxford style for unique look and better breathability
  • Lace-up construction for customizable secure fit
Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Patches Ox Description

The original All-Stars are high-tops, but don't consider the Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Ox retro shoes blasphemous. Think of them instead like the convertible model of a classic car. Then think of that car as getting a fresh paint job! We all love the Chucks' legendary original design, but sometimes it's nice to let the top down and catch some fresh air. Yes, your ankles appreciate the extra support of those timeless patched high-rise models, but did it ever occur to you that those pasty ankles might appreciate a little sunlight every once in a while?

The Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Ox are about as open air as Chucks are probably going to get, unless, of course, you take a pair of scissors to your All-Stars to make some Chuck Taylor flip-flops, in which case may the shoe gods smite you with athlete's feet and ingrown toenails for such heresy. Stop the blasphemy and order your new favorite Chuck Taylor Al Star OX retro shoes today!

Recently viewed items in your Locker

You might also like

  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Multi Upper Ox - 107227F
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star Multi
    Upper Ox

    $ 55.00 $ 45.99
  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Multi Upper Hi - 105707F
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star Multi
    Upper Hi

    $ 55.00 $ 32.99
  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Charmer Ox - 102995
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star
    Charmer Ox

    $ 85.00 $ 39.99
  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Games Ox - 105746F
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star Games
    Ox

    $ 50.00 $ 29.99
  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Plaid Ox - 108712F
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star Plaid
    Ox

    $ 50.00 $ 34.99
  • Converse Chuck Taylor All Star Plaid Hi - 108710F
    Converse

    Chuck Taylor All Star Plaid
    Hi

    $ 50.00 $ 36.99
  • Brand History
    Converse

    According to legend, in 1918, a high school basketball player laced up his first pair of Converse All-Stars; Converse's first basketball shoe, released only one year previous. At that point, basketball itself was only 27 years old, and the formation of the NBA was 28 years away. Being a "professional" basketball player involved "barnstorming"-- joining a locally based traveling team and touring the country playing loosely-organized exhibition matches for small crowds. This high school player, 17 year-old Charles H. Taylor, would go on to a brief and largely unrecorded career as a barnstormer. Fifty years later, this early player and fan of both basketball and Converse All-Star sneakers would be inducted into the basketball hall of fame; not for his success as a player, but as a shoe salesman.

    By the time Chuck Taylor joined Converse in 1921, the company was already an established footwear manufacturer, but still fairly new to the concept of athletic shoes. Founded in Malden, Massachusetts in 1908 by Marquis M. Converse, the Converse Rubber Shoe Company initially found success producing rubber-soled winter footwear, manufacturing up to 4,000 pairs per day by 1910. They were designed to prevent slipping on an icy sidewalk, but were certainly no pop-culture icons. In 1915, the company added a tennis shoe to the product line, and two years later released the not-yet famous All-Star basketball shoe. It was this shoe, of course, which Chuck Taylor (according to legend, anyway) improved in 1921 by suggesting a more flexible outsole and the shoe's signature supportive ankle patch. After he'd spent two years touring the country promoting the newly improved All-Star and the still-fledgling sport of basketball, Converse added Chuck's actual signature to the shoe's patch. Now, what is arguably the most famous athletic shoe ever was complete and ready to barnstorm its way into basketball legend and American history.

    In the following decades, the All-Star became the ultimate hoops shoe, appearing on basketball courts everywhere. Its evolution saw it modified in team-specific color variations and worn by legendary NBA players like Julius "Dr. J" Erving (who was given his own line of shoes in 1976) and Wilt "The Stilt" Chamberlain (who famously set the single game scoring record in 1962 by racking up 100 points with a pair of Converse on his size 15 feet).

    One of the first teams to adopt the All-Star was the also the first all-black barnstorming team; the now-legendary New York Renaissance. Converse developed custom All-Stars for the Rens in 1923, and the team went on to more than 2,500 wins and a World Basketball Tournament championship, despite a demanding touring schedule and racial discrimination preventing them from joining any professional league. Another set of history makers, the All-American Red Heads (one of the first female basketball teams) got customized All-Stars in 1936. These days, fully-integrated basketball teams and the Women's NBA are taken for granted, but back then, there were just a few brave and talented pioneers with All-Stars on their feet.

    The Chuck Taylor All-Star made the Converse brand famous, but the company has released several classics over the years, including the Jack Purcell in 1925, the One Star (a low cut basketball shoe later adopted by skateboarders) in 1974, and the Weapon-- still an old school favorite on basketball courts everywhere-- in 1986. Not content to live in the past, Converse opened one of the nation's first biomechanics labs in 1981 to research technology to make shoes more comfortable and better performing. In 1992, the company patented REACT custom-fit technology, increasing the cushioning and stability that a basketball shoe's construction can offer. Chuck Taylor's legacy lives on today, as the Converse All-Stars, mostly unchanged since 1923, remain as one of the best selling athletic shoes worldwide, produced in such a wide variety of designs, styles, and colors that not even Chuck could've suggested them all.