{"id":19182,"date":"2025-01-22T07:56:23","date_gmt":"2025-01-22T07:56:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/inuno.ai\/runnings-big-fashion-opportunity-bof\/"},"modified":"2025-01-22T07:56:23","modified_gmt":"2025-01-22T07:56:23","slug":"runnings-big-fashion-opportunity-bof","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/inuno.ai\/runnings-big-fashion-opportunity-bof\/","title":{"rendered":"Running\u2019s Big Fashion Opportunity | BoF"},"content":{"rendered":"
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If you\u2019ve made a New Year\u2019s resolution to start running, the hardest part about getting started may be deciding what to wear.<\/p>\n
Options for running apparel are so plentiful that a cottage industry of online directories, Instagram moodboards and sub-Reddits have sprung up to help would-be joggers and marathoners make sense of it all. Performance sneakers boasting carbon plates or lightweight materials now come with sneakerhead-coded collaborations and colourways that sell out online. Boutiques, including Distance in Paris and Renegade in Oakland, California target fashion-conscious runners. Even Brooks, a brand that\u2019s traditionally been focused on performance, recently announced it would launch its first lifestyle sneaker in March with the streetwear and sneaker collaboration pioneer Jeff Staple. <\/p>\n
Fashion\u2019s incursion into the running world comes as the sport\u2019s popularity is surging. A record number of people participated in marathons last year. Participation in running clubs shot up 59 percent globally in 2024, according to the fitness app Strava. The viral rise of these organisations, which exist for casual and elite runners alike, have helped turn running into a social activity where personal style is a bigger factor. <\/p>\n
\u201cRunning is not just about participating in the race, but about how you live your life every day,\u201d said Gabriele Casaccia, the creative director and founder of Mental Athletic<\/i>, a new bi-annual print magazine centered on contemporary running culture that looks more akin to Dazed <\/i>than Runner\u2019s World<\/i>. <\/p>\n
The race is on among sportswear brands to win these new customers, who don\u2019t yet have hundreds of miles logged in Brooks or Nike sneakers (though those brands are seeing strong demand for running shoes and gear too). There are performance-meets-fashion labels such as Satisfy, District Vision, and Soar, all founded in the early 2010s, as well as decades-old brands like Asics and Saucony, both of which made StockX\u2019s list of top-five fastest growing sneaker brands in 2024. <\/p>\n
As running-wear becomes a hyped fashion subcategory akin to streetwear, old and new running brands must distinguish themselves within a crowded marketplace by understanding new customers that sit at the intersection between lifestyle and the sport, engaging with a community-centered audience, while remaining authentic to their unique perspective and the customers that they serve. <\/p>\n
\u201cAs the hype gets bigger it instantly creates new players,\u201d said Christian Weigand, founder of the Substack and Instagram page Runners Highest. \u201cRight now, running and running culture is in a place where everyone has their own spot if they want one.\u201d<\/p>\n
Cole Townsend, the founder of Running Supply (a Substack newsletter and online directory that curates and directs visitors to fashionable running products) believes that casualisation of running and the rise of lifestyle-influenced marketing within the space is leading running brands to target specific personas within a vast space\u2014rather than vying to become a broadly focused sports brand such as Nike.<\/p>\n
\u201cYou need to find a new sliver, a new persona, that is appealing to people,\u201d said Townsend.<\/p>\n