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Nike had nothing to do with the Satan Shoes or the Jesus Shoes,” a spokesperson for Nike told Input. “Today, April 8th, Nike and MSCHF have agreed to settle the lawsuit.
As part of the settlement, Nike asked MSCHF to initiate a voluntary recall to buy back any Satan Shoes and Jesus Shoes for their original retail prices, in order to remove them from circulation.
Written by two of Mschf’s cofounders, Kevin Wiesner and Lukas Bentel, the 384-page “Made by Mschf” is largely visual and plays up experimentation. Started in 2016 and reincorporated in 2019, by ...
As previously reported, MSCHF claimed the shoes were works of art and argued in court that the shoemaker did not object to its 2019 release of Jesus Shoes, which were also a custom Air Max.
Of course, this isn’t the first time MSCHF, a creative label based out of Brooklyn, has worked on a religion-themed sneaker, following the drop of its “Jesus Shoes” back in 2019 — which ...
Update, on April 12, 2021: Nike and MSCHF have settled the lawsuit over Lil Nas X's “Satan Shoes.” As reported by WWD on April 9, Nike and MSCHF came to an agreement on Thursday, April 8.
MSCHF took 24 pairs of Nike Air Max 97s and injected the soles with blessed water from the Jordan River, the same river where Jesus was believed to be baptized.
As part of the settlement, MSCHF will buy back any "Satan Shoes" and its 2019 "Jesus Shoes" — featuring a gold crucifix charm and holy water in its midsoles — for their original retail prices ...
MSCHF is known for stunt products like its 2019 “Jesus Shoes,” a $1,425 pair of white Nike Air Max 97s with custom stitching and 60ccs of water from the River Jordan. Nike didn’t object to ...
As an example, In 2019, MSCHF debuted custom Air Max 97 "Jesus shoes" that the company said were filled with 60 cc of holy water sourced from the River Jordan.
Per The Hollywood Reporter, as part of the settlement, MSCHF has asked customers who bought and then received the Satan Shoes — and a similar line of Jesus Shoes that were released in 2019 ...