At this moment while I have had a chance to use very a enormous assortment of the Nike Dunks, I have to admit that it is the Nike Dunk High Premium ND X Cassette Playa (which I only got to use recently) that I have since gotten most enchanted with. including blue (which is what makes up the circular ‘cassette player element’) and red – which graces a few patches here and there on the trainer, and lastly yellow, which has the ‘honor’ of enhancing the very back end of the sneaker.
The Nike Dunk High Premium is one of the merchandise in the ‘high’ Nike Dunks merchandise, which consists of others like the well-liked Nike Dunk SB, the Nike Dunk High Premium Osaka Dotonbori, and the Nike Dunk High Premium SB – Bloody Sunday, among others. Perhaps one of the most unusual things about the Nike-Dunk High Premium is its name, which it evidently gets from a round pattern somewhere towards the center of the trainer (where the Nike Tick is rooted) – which extremely much looks like the regular cassette player. And while cassette players might have been pushed out of way by the CD and MP3 players of today, the Nike Dunk High Premium ND X Cassette Playa is without a doubt one trainer that has not been pushed out of style; and in fact without having heard about its name, it could possibly be a tad hard for you to conceptualize the circular pattern at the center of the Nike Dunk High Premium as being representative of a cassette player.
Patterns aside, though, the Nike Dunk Shoes does give on its promise of tallness, it being a trainer that towers at almost a half of a foot at its highest. It starts from what might be described as an advantaged point, height-wise, thanks to its it relatively high sole, before somehow abating from that highest point towards the back, so that the very back point is moderate lower than the very mid region at the tip of the shoe’s tongue. which adds at least an inch, if not more to its overall height. Of course, the Nike Dunk High Premium is not a boot, and most of the height it is associated with is manufactured through ‘upper body’ design considerations (which created ‘illusions of height’), rather than that just elongating the sneaker endlessly. In this regard, the sneaker starts off with pretty a long flat region on its front (where the toes are supposed to go in), but then increases a amazingly steep gradient towards the center which -as would be expected, peaks at the tip of the ‘nose’ of the trainer (where the sneaker meets the wearer’s foot -shaft), My unique pair of the Nike Dunk X Cassette Playa is primarily black (as most cassette players were, one would say), though in keeping with Nike’s established liberality with color, a number of other color elements do make a exhibiting on the sneaker.