Daniel Ghattas, 21, of Woodland Hills, had been in line since 4 p.m. Tuesday to make sure he would be able to get a pair. "I've been collecting Nike Dunks shoes since I was 4-years-old," said Ghattas.
In the 10 days after the Minnesota Lynx made Maya Moore the No. 1 pick in April's WNBA draft, the team sold more than 250 season tickets to new buyers, including men who never have attended a league game.
She became the first women's basketball player to sign with Kid's Nike Dunks Jordan Brand. Lynx sponsors and other WNBA teams have asked about building marketing campaigns around her.
"I'm here to play basketball, to be a great basketball player," Moore said. "That's what I love. But that's given me the opportunity to have a voice, and I want to use it in a meaningful way."
The 33 year old Haroshi is a sustainable focused artist and skateboarder based in Tokyo. Though he has been creating amazing pieces of sculpture from recycled skateboards for almost a decade, he had been operating under America's radar until earlier this year. All that changed when he was commissioned to create a Dunk shoe by Nike Dunks SB, and create he did. The result was a 3D sculpture made out of skateboards once used by the Nike SB skateboarding team.
The shoes were sold for $110 nationwide and are said to be on sale for this one time only. Customers were limited to one pair of shoes each, and received bracelets to be able to go inside the store.
The Nike store in Camarillo let customers inside in groups of about five to buy the shoes. The shoes were sold out in less than an hour and many people were left without a pair.
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