
The author's dream pair of Converse All Stars. "While they might look like a Good & Plenty factory accident to you, they salute my first two pairs of chucks (pink and black respectively). And I designed them myself at converse.com. You can do the same, picking details down to the racing stripe, for $60."
If this story merely concerned a man and his canvas shoe obsession, then I’d swipe and corrupt the opening from “Moby Dick”: “Call me Imelda.” But lacing up Chuck Taylor high-tops represents much more to mea convergence of nofrills fashion, athletic spirit and rock energy ... especially the rock part. Many music heroes, from Joey Ramone to Bruce Springsteen to Kurt Cobain, adopted Converse All Stars as their sneaker of choice. So have I for more than 20 years nowfrom the time I dished my first bartop guitar solo in a New Jersey heavy-metal dive to just months ago, when I addressed college journalists as their keynote speaker at a conference.
And as I have grown with the mighty Converse shoe, so Converse has expanded. This fall will not only see new additions to designer John Varvatos’ footwear line, but also Converse men’s and women’s clothing by Varvatos that mixes nuanced athletic with indie aesthetic. Kids are big on Converse All Stars too. For evidence of this, I had to look no further than a children’s birthday party I attended days ago. The guest of honor wore her sea-foam green chucks with all the pride of a hip preschool princess.
Just who was Chuck Taylor? The lofty state of the All Star could barely be foreseen back in 1918, when Charles H. Taylor, a basketballer with the Akron Firestones, acquired his first pair. Decades before Michael Jordan, “Chuck” Taylor became the first player-endorser of athletic footwear in 1921, and added his signature to Converse high-tops two years later. (A lowtop line of All Stars dating to 1935 is named for Jack Purcell, a badminton and tennis player.) Milestones soon followednone greater than in 1962, when Wilt Chamberlain scored 100 points in an NBA game wearing chucks. As their popularity soared, seven colors were added to black and white in 1966, to match jersey colors. By then, non-athletic teens had adopted chucks as a cheap symbol of rebellion.
And in the 1970s, two musical acts did wonders for basic black Chuck Taylors seminal punkers the Ramones and roots rocker Springsteen. Unofficial endorsers: The Boss, The Ramones. Though The Boss’ Converse did not appear on the “Born to Run” album cover in 1975, photo outtakes feature the shoe, including a famous Columbia Records poster where they dangle from his guitar headstock. (A decade later, he would own some 28 pairs.)
Today, Converse, acquired by Nike in 2003, offers a commemorative pair of black Ramones sneakerswith the band’s eagle emblem on the ankle patchfor $62. Other limited and designer editions command similarly high prices. But the basic All Stars can still be had for $20 at stores such as Marshall’s, where I get many of mine. In “Ode to a Pair of Socks,” poet Pablo Neruda slips on gift stockings that transform his feet into something mystical, the socks “two little boxes knit from threads of sunset and sheepskin.” I feel something akin to that, albeit more feisty, less fanciful, when I wear my chucks. It’s ironic that a weakness of the shoeits not-so-great arch supportactually makes my feet feel more connected to the earth. I suspect other rockers feel the same way too.
In the past couple weeks, I witnessed two magnificent rock shows. At Schubas, Spoon drummer Jim Eno, clad in low-top, danger-red All-Stars, pounded out masterly beats. And at the Metro, lead guitarist Sergio Dias of the legendary tropicalia band Os Mutantes prowled the stage in black leather Converse. Dias turns 56 in December. But with chucks hugging his feet, he might as well be timeless: Too old to rock ’n’ roll? My foot.

The author's collection of high top chucks.
by Lou Cardoza
Lou Cardoza is a feature writer for the Chicago Tribune
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