Almost 20 years ago, Nike set out to craft a shoe that delivers peak performance for athletes while reducing manufacturing waste in the process. In reality, Nike Air Force 1 Donnewhat it created was a war that would Nike Air Vapormax Damen give rise to hundreds of thousands – if not millions – of dollars in costs and stretch over years and continents. Inside Nike’s ultra-secretive Beaverton, Oregon headquarters, this shoe took the form of years of intensive research and development, and expenses Nike Air Max Tn Damen that CEO Mark Parker thought the $86 billion sportswear giant might never recoup. But then in February 2012, Nike debuted what was deemed to be the most momentous innovation in the fiercely competitive, and multibillion-dollar-earning sneaker market in years. It was Flyknit. The technology, itself, uses yarn and fabric variations to engineer “a featherweight, formfitting and virtually seamless upper.” In addition to “a precision fit,” the woven upper of Flyknit footwear – the first sneakers to bear an upper that consists of a single piece of Adidas NMD Damen material, as opposed to one derived from Nike Air Huarache Femmedifferent pieces stitched together – results in little to no waste in the manufacturing process. With roots at Nike that date back to at least 2000, when the Oregon-based sportswear giant made its very first prototype in working to create a sneaker with a woven-fabric upper, the technology represents “the right direction for Nike, from both a bottom-line and an environmental perspective,” Parker told the Wall Street Journal in 2015. And it has performed. In the Nike Air Max 270 Dames five years since its initial release, sneakers that bear the Flyknit technology have brought in upwards of $1 billion in sales for Nike.Within five months of the debut of the Nike Flyknit came another striking development: adidas unveiled knitted footwear of its own, Primeknit. Hailing the product as "Nike Air Max 270 Donne a first-of-its-kind running shoe,”Adidas ZX 700 Donne adidas’ Primeknit was borne from a method that involves digitally knitting a single piece of www.garanterra.de fused yarn to create a single-thread upper and reduce material waste. While James Carnes, adidas' head of sport performance design, said at the time that the Primeknit had been in development for three years, and while adidas executives had, for some time, “been quietly telling a select number of footwear industry figures” about their own Primeknit technology, no one was prepared for what was to come ... except maybe Nike. "Adidas told me they were working on a similar technology to Flyknit," trusted footwear analyst Matt Powell, told OregonLive, "but I had no idea it was this similar." The likeness of the adidas’ shoe to that of its American rival’s Flyknit was unmistakable. Adidas called its Primeknit Adidas Ultra Boost Donne shoe “one of [its] most exciting and www.marioverta.it sustainable products ever.” Nike called it a copy.“I am not surprised at the admiration – and the imitation – [the Flyknit] has generated," Mark Parker Nike M2k Tekno Dames told a crowd of shareholders at Nike’s annual meeting in 2012. In the wings, the sneaker juggernaut’s sizable legal team was readying for battle: adidas would soon be on the receiving end of a swift and strongly-worded lawsuit, not terribly unlike the 2006 suit that Nike filed against its archrival, claiming that it was making footwear using elements of patent-protected SHOX technology. The world’s largest sportswear company wanted adidas’ Primeknit footwear shut down and it wanted it done now