At 10 a.m. on a recent Tuesday, New Balance’s website was the hottest ticket online. Around 70,000 customers waited in a virtual queue to get their hands on a pair of the brand’s puffed-up low-top basketball sneaker, the 550. The $110 style has been a runaway hit ever since it was pulled out of the archives in fall 2020 by collaborator Teddy Santis, founder of New York City streetwear brand Aimé Leon Dore. The latest frenzy was notable, though, because the sneakers in question weren’t part of ALD’s limited-edition collab, which fetch a premium on the secondary market and tend to be targets for resellers. They were just a restock of New Balance’s regular version of the shoe, and still they sold out in seconds.
Then came 2016, when the brand became a political flashpoint after an executive made statements in support of then president Donald Trump. Fans posted videos burning their New Balances in protest — and the brand had to do damage control to clarify that it was not, in fact, the go-to sneaker of white supremacy.
Six years later people have come around on New Balance, with some of the brand’s biggest fans having names that include Bieber, Kravitz, and Hadid. Since the political fracas, the brand has admirably managed to offset any lingering negativity or possibility of fading into the background by delving into the collaboration game, which—if done right—creates gotta-have-it buzz. By all accounts New Balance has been doing it right—every collaboration it touches from ALD, L.A.–based womenswear label Staud, maverick footwear designer Salehe Bembury, even Italian luxury brand Miu Miu — seems to turn to gold; and last spring it signed Santis, one of the most exciting designers and brand-builders working today, as the new creative director of its locally manufactured Made in USA line. Its Miu Miu sneakers, released last month, proved customers were willing to spend $700 on a shoe that typically retails for $85 (unlike the standard style, the luxury sneaker was made and manufactured in Italy). And in the coming months, the brand plans to build out its womens offerings with two new designer collaborations and a growing assortment of fashion-forward apparel.