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Vans defines L.A. style. Here are 10 of the best-ever styles and collabs

A Vans black-and-white checkerboard slip-on sneaker.
Vans has collaborated with many popular brands and pop-culture properties over the years, including Supreme and “Star Wars,” but it gained popularity on the back of its black-and-white-checkerboard slip-on.
(Vans)
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When Vans cofounder Paul Van Doren died last week at age 90, one particular shoe — a slip-on sneaker with a waffle-bottom sole and a black-and-white-checkerboard canvas upper — took centerstage.

This is understandable; it’s the shoe that almost singlehandedly — make that singlefootedly — set the company on its way to becoming a multibillion-dollar action sports brand, and it’s as instantly identifiable a piece of branding as Nike’s swoosh. It also does a disservice to the handful of silhouettes, and countless pop-culture collaborations in the last 55 years, that have earned the Costa Mesa-based, VF-owned brand a place in the hearts and shoe closets of millions of fans around the globe.

A focus on custom kicks and an early embrace by SoCal skaters helped him build a multi-billion-dollar brand.

In homage to Van Doren and the company he co-founded, here’s a look at some of the brand’s most iconic styles and a roundup of some of its standout collaborations with the worlds of music, art and fashion.

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Authentic

A photo of a navy blue lace-up sneaker.
Introduced in 1966 as Style 44 and now known as the Authentic, this deck shoe with the waffle bottom and canvas upper was the first silhouette made by the Van Doren Rubber Co.
(Vans)

The lace-up deck shoe that started it all: The Authentic (a.k.a. Style 44), with a canvas upper, is the first style put into production by the Van Doren Rubber Co. in 1966.

Era

A photo of a black lace-up sneaker with white stitching.
The Vans Era was designed with help from skateboarders Stacy Peralta and Tony Alva.
(Vans)
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After being embraced by SoCal skate culture, Vans tapped two of its standout stars — Tony Alva and Stacy Peralta — to help create the first shoe designed by skateboarders for skateboarders. Style 95, which dates to 1976, is a low-top skate shoe with a padded collar. It was originally offered with a variety of two-tone canvas uppers.

Old Skool

A photo of a red lace-up sneaker with a white sidestripe.
The Old Skool silhouette was the first Vans sneaker to bear the wavy sidestripe, which started out as a doodle drawn by cofounder Paul Van Doren.
(Vans)

Added to the lineup in 1977 as Style 36, this shoe marks two firsts: It was the brand’s first skate shoe to incorporate leather panels to improve durability, and it was the first style to bear the wavy sidestripe design (dubbed the jazz stripe), which began as a random doodle drawn by Van Doren.

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Classic Slip-On

A photo of a slip-on sneaker with a black-and-white checkerboard pattern.
A black-and-white-checkerboard version of Van’s Classic Slip-On appeared in the 1982 movie “Fast Times at Ridgemont High,” profoundly affecting the company’s fortunes.
(Vans)

A slip-on was introduced in 1977 as Style 98. A black-and-white checkerboard version appeared in the 1982 movie “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” as part of surfer/stoner Jeff Spicoli’s wardrobe (actor Sean Penn wore his own pair), and that changed everything. “‘Fast Times’ definitely put us on the map,” Van Doren’s son Steve told The Times in a 2016 interview. “We were about a $20-million company before the movie came out, and we were on track for $40 million to $45 million after that.”

Sk8-Hi

A photo of a black high-top sneaker with a white sidestripe and white stitching.
The high-top Sk8-Hi silhouette, introduced in 1978, aimed to add extra protection in the ankle area for skaters.
(Vans)

Introduced in 1978 and originally known as Style 38, the Sk8-Hi was notable for the sidestripe introduced the year before and for its high-top silhouette, which added a layer of protection to the ankles of skate park-shredding athletes.

Collaborations

Art

Vans shoes, especially the Classic Slip-On with its uncluttered vamp, are often treated as a canvas for expression. Therefore, it makes sense that artist and museum collaborations have been part of the mix.

Over the years, Vans has made it possible to step out with feet wrapped in artwork by underground comix pioneer R. Crumb (2009), Takashi Murakami (2015), Frida Kahlo (2019) and ink-splattering gonzo illustrator Ralph Steadman (2019). Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum got in on the action for a 2018 apparel, footwear and accessories collection that featured imagery plucked from a handful of the Dutch artist’s paintings, such as “Skull,” “Sunflowers” and “Almond Blossom.” New York’s Museum of Modern Art jumped on the collab train for a Vans X MoMA capsule collection (2020) that features the work of Edvard Munch, Jackson Pollock, Lyubov Popova and Faith Ringgold, among others.

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Music

Vans’ close ties with the music community are thanks in part to the brand’s quarter century-long sponsorship of the Vans Warped Tour annual concert series, and its partnerships with musical acts have spawned collaborative kicks with a who’s who of the recording industry, including Judas Priest, Slayer, Iron Maiden, Motörhead, Tyler the Creator, Pearl Jam, Kiss and David Bowie. However, the bands don’t get much bigger than the Beatles, and a 2014 collection — timed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Fab Four’s first appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” and using trippy imagery from “Yellow Submarine” — notched a high-water mark for the company’s musical partnerships. (And it may finally answer the decades-old question of why Paul McCartney was barefoot on the cover of “Abbey Road.” He was holding out for a pair of these shoes.)

From cactus kicks and mushroom bags to potato-peel buttons, foodstuffs go fashion-forward in shoes, bags and other goods.

Fashion

Although Vans and New York-based streetwear brand Supreme are known for their serial collaborations (including several together), a 1996 collaborative Old Skool shoe — complete with the rectangular red-and-white Supreme box logo on a tab between the sidestripe and the eyestay — marks the first partnership between the two. It turns out that the mashup wasn’t just cool but prescient; in late 2020, VF purchased Supreme for $2.1 billion, making both brands part of the same corporate family.

Other high-profile, covet-worthy fashion-brand collaborative kicks have come courtesy of London-based Liberty Fabrics, Pendleton Woolen Mills, Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs, British heritage brand Barbour, Jerry Lorenzo’s L.A.-based Fear of God label, and multiple partnerships over the years with Opening Ceremony and Comme des Garçons — the latter of which included a mind-boggling, four-way collaboration with Parisian boutique Colette and Belgian fashion designer Raf Simons.

TV, film and video games

If it’s appeared on a screen — movie, TV or video-game console — it’s probably appeared on a pair of Vans at some point (or will in the not-too-distant future). The Peanuts gang has popped up on pairs (2014), as have Disney characters (2015) and Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob SquarePants (in 2018; a second collection is set to drop next month). A 2016 collaboration with Nintendo mined the Japanese video-game maker’s early ‘80s catalog to create Donkey Kong kicks, Duck Hunt socks, and tie-dyed backpacks and trucker caps depicting a mushroom-pouncing Mario.

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A tie-in to “The Simpsons Movie” (2007) resulted in three-way collabs with graffiti artists Stash and Neckface, tattoo artist Mr. Cartoon and Gary Panter (known for his Emmy-winning set design work for “Pee-Wee’s Playhouse”) serving up their versions of America’s favorite four-fingered family and their friends. A 2019 Harry Potter collection (themed around the houses of Hogwarts) was so popular out of the gate that it took nothing short of a magic wand to score a piece before the whole thing sold out.

The Van Doren Rubber Co. threw open its retail doors at 704 E. Broadway in Anaheim on March 16, 1966.

Our hands-down favorite pop-culture pairing, though, was the first of several collaborative collections with the “Star Wars” film franchise. Dropping in June 2014, it featured half a dozen shoe styles ranging from the straightforward (slip-ons emblazoned with imagery from the original film’s 1977 movie poster) to unexpectedly delightful riffs on Vans’ heritage prints, including bandanna prints tweaked to include Stormtrooper helmets and a Hawaiian floral motif dubbed “Yoda Aloha” that featured the pointy-eared green one cavorting among the flowers.

Local businesses

A white sneaker sitting on a shoe box.
The Vans X Kids of Immigrants collaboration, released in October 2020, is one of the many notable partnerships between the 55-year-old Costa Mesa-based action sports label and other brands.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Not all of Vans’ cool collabs have been with internationally known brands, bands or pop-culture properties. Over the years, the company has partnered with smaller, sometimes under-the-radar SoCal companies to create limited-edition collections.

Some of the collaborators that have caught our attention over the years include local chefs Jon Shook and Vinny Dotolo (in 2016), chefwear label Hedley & Bennett (2018) and Kids of Immigrants (2020).

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