Adidas, Transmission

Adidas Originals came to Firstborn with the opportunity to name, position, and help launch a new line of NMD and Hardcourts for a drop across four national retailers—Champs Sports, Foot Locker, Kids Foot Locker, and Footaction. Not only was this one of the biggest NMD drops to date, but it was also the first Hardcourt release in years.

Developing the Brand for the Collection

 

All we were handed was a low-res render of the shoes and the moodboard of ‘90s hip-hop references that inspired the design. Big logos. Loud prints. And bold everything. The shoes themselves were the perfect distillation of those references, but updated for a new generation of creators. They’re meant to inspire a target audience obsessed with remixing and re-working the past, putting their own creative spin on things to help drive the culture forward.

It’s a creative process rooted in social media—endlessly iterative, overly public, and constantly broadcasting to the world. So, as a nod to the always-on, always creating culture of our target, we dubbed this drop the “Transmission Pack.” With the Transmission Pack, our challenge was to create one cohesive brand system that was unique enough for each of the retailers involved in the launch.

Everything needed to feel similar, but distinct enough from brand to brand. So, we looked to the shoes and drew our inspiration from the repeating patterns and oversized logos that made this iteration of the NMD and Hardcourt so recognizable.

Content that works.

We meticulously rendered each shoe in 3D, giving us ultimate freedom to animate shoes and ribbons interacting in adidas-branded space.

 
 

Creativity in Process

 

We had our name and we had our look, but we still needed a way to launch these shoes in a way that would get our target excited—and get them buying. But how do you create a campaign for an audience whose personality is always in flux? How do you create a campaign for a group of people who are, by their own admission, in the process of figuring out who they are and what they actually care about? You create something that celebrates that process and gets them involved in shaping… everything. We called it, “Creativity in Process.” At its core, the campaign was about giving fans an in-depth, rarely seen look at the work that goes into creating a piece of art—from ideation to final execution. We partnered with some of New York’s most inspiring artists, challenging them to create a brand new piece of art inspired by the Transmission Pack.

We kept things local, working with artists living and working within a few blocks of each other and exhibited their art in those same neighborhoods. Then, we invited our fans into the process, getting them involved and opening up opportunities for collaboration—like an interactive, public process diary on Google Docs where they could comment and leave feedback on the artist’s work. We also made use of the polls feature on Instagram, giving our fans a direct line of communication to our artists. This allowed us to solicit real-time feedback from our target and get them involved in the final artistic output. The result of all this collaboration? Three brand new pieces of art and three videos documenting the process from start to finish.

Credits

 

My role: Pitch lead, concept development and refinement, digital strategy and all design approvals.

ACD, Justin Earley

ACD Design, Jess Tainsh

Design and Art Direction, Kyle Helmstetter and Dan Lemperle

ECD on Alvin Kamara video, Gradwell Sears.

Giovanni Reda, Director (films)

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