If Vans never made another shoe, it’d continue to thrive on the reputation of the Authentic.
Over half a century since its inception, the model is more than the world’s most recognizable skate shoe. It’s one of its most recognizable shoes, period.
However, despite the Authentic’s widespread ubiquity, most people fail to realize that it was never designed for ollies and kickflips.

Launched in 1966, then with the name Style #44, the shoe followed the form factor of designs from Sperry Top-Sider and SeaVees (an offshoot of Converse), all built to weather slippery conditions while sailing.
In a way, that then makes Vans’s latest rendition of the Authentic, well, more authentic than the others.






