Release Date: End. x adidas Consortium Terrex Agravic XT

These shoes have a variety of colors, and each one looks so handsome and full of charm.

Since it first came into being, adidas Consortium has been committed to bringing together partners, retailers and collectives who exemplify a unique, fearless approach to collaboration. Each new partnership offers up a creative new take on the iconic styles that adidas has developed over the decades. In doing so they shine an entirely new light on the sportswear brand’s high-performance technologies and commitment to craftsmanship.

The latest adidas Consortium release is the result of a collaboration with the UK-based retailers END., which began life as a highly-curated apparel and sneaker store in Newcastle, England back in 2005. The store quickly established itself as the go-to destination for zeitgeist-defining streetwear in the North-East of England, before blazing a trail as a true e-commerce success story – a platform from which it has established a global following for its vast, diverse selection of international brands.

For their new collaboration with adidas Consortium, END. turn their attentions to the Terrex Agravic XT, a tough but lightweight contemporary trail-running model originally released in 2018. The End. x adidas Consortium Terrex Agravic XT is inspired by the highly technical outdoor jackets, bringing refined functionality and subtly distinctive aesthetics to the lower-most part of an outfit. Most obviously, this comes in the form of heat-reactive materials across the uppers, colliding the outdoors movement with innovative technologies as END. joins adidas on its first journey into heat-reactivity.

Look for the End. x adidas Consortium Terrex Agravic XT to release on March 30th at End. locations and endclothing.com for the retail price of $225. Customers can sign up through a raffle via End. Launches.

Adidas was founded by Adolf “Adi” Dassler who made sports shoes in his mother’s scullery or laundry room in Herzogenaurach, Germany after his return from World War I. In July 1924.