Fashion / NewsFashion / NewsNike launches limited edition Pride styles designed by basketball iconsThis Pride month, married couple Courtney Vandersloot and Allie Quigley have swapped shooting hoops for shoe designShareLink copied ✔️ In Partnership with Nike June 6, 2025June 6, 2025Text Dazed Digital Finally, summer 2025 is here, and so is Pride month. To mark the occasion, Nike has unveiled a series of new styles designed specifically with Pride in mind. A true moment for celebration, Nike’s latest shoes have been designed by legacy athletes Courtney Vandersloot and Allie Quigley – a married couple who have just welcomed their first child. Both US-based professional basketball players, Courtney Vandersloot first met Allie Quigley in Slovakia, towards the end of the 2012/13 Euroleague season. Of course, they met on the basketball court when Quigley’s team (who won) played Vandersloot’s team during a five-game series. At that point, Vandersloot had already been playing with her US team for three years, and as a result of the impressive Slovakian championship, Quigley was also approached by them, despite very nearly quitting basketball for good. The two players met for a second time on the plane back to the US and for a third time in the limousine that picked them both up from the airport. For the ‘Vanderquigs’, as they playfully call themselves now, the rest is history. The pair were married in December 2018, in front of 100 guests in Vandersloot’s hometown of Seattle. Seven years later and the couple are not only growing their family (they welcomed daughter Jana Christine Vandersloot Quigley in April) but growing their skillset too, having now turned their hand to sneaker design. The couple have launched their own limited edition interpretations of some of Nike’s most coveted styles: the Air Max 1, P-6000 and Sabrina 2. Nike Air Max 1 For PRIDE, By Courtney Vandersloot Though both players picked the Sabrina 2 for an individual makeover, Quigley also picked the P-6000, while Vandersloot opted for the Air Max 1. Quigley’s P-6000 features a silver palette and iridescent lilac sheen – a colour often heavily associated with queer women. Her version of the Sabrina 2 is vibrant, glow-in-the-dark and unmissable on or off the court. As for Vandersloot’s Sabrina 2, the colourways are a deeper, yet more subtle take on the Pride flag, whilst her Air Max 1 is somewhat less subtle – it’s playful, fun and even features an intricate daisy design within the Nike swoosh. Nike P-6000 For PRIDE, By Allie QuigleySabrina 2 For PRIDE, By Allie QuigleyEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingWalter Pfeiffer, the cult photographer of beauty, sex and outsidersAs a major retrospective of his work opens in Turin, the Swiss image-maker reflects on magazines, finding success as an ‘outsider’, and why he’s still working at 80Art & PhotographyFashionNipples, nachos and mask4mask: The biggest trends at the Met Gala 2026 Art & PhotographyThings To Come: Porn saves the world in Maja Malou Lyse’s ‘bimbo sci-fi’Beauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismBeautyHoroscopes May 2026: It’s a money month, so expect a surprise windfallFashionMeet the young superfans camping outside the Met Gala PolaroidArt & PhotographyThree Dazed Clubbers on documenting a complete digital detoxFashionMet Gala 2026: The best dressed stars from the biggest night in fashionEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy