The Nike Cortez “Ironstone” Features a Widened Toebox

Name: Nike Cortez “Ironstone”Colorway: Ironstone/Black-Baroque BrownSKU: DM4044-005MSRP: ¥13,860 JPY ($90 USD)Release Date: Available now (Japan), TBC (Global)Where to Buy: BILLY’S ENT (Japan)Nike is updating the Cortez in an Ironstone/Black-Baroque Brown colorway. The silhouette, Nike's first shoe released in 1972, has been refreshed based on feedback with a wider toe box delivering improved comfort and fit while preserving the retro aesthetic that has kept it in continuous production for more than five decades.The toe box widening is the update's most functionally significant change. The original Cortez's narrow forefoot has historically been one of the silhouette's more polarizing fit characteristics, and broadening that zone without altering the shoe's overall profile addresses a specific complaint without redesigning the shoe around it. The upper retains the same material combination of natural leather, synthetic leather, and synthetic fiber that has defined recent Cortez iterations, giving the shoe a layered surface quality that keeps the retro construction legible while allowing for the color variety that each new colorway requires.The Ironstone/Black-Baroque Brown palette applies that layered material logic to a three-tone earthy combination. Ironstone, a muted grey-green, anchors the upper's base surfaces, with Black handling the overlays and branding details that give the silhouette its structural definition. Baroque Brown introduces warmth at specific points, providing the palette's most distinctive tonal departure and the detail that separates this colorway from a standard neutral two-tone. Together the three colors sit in a restrained range that suits the Cortez's 1972 runner heritage without reaching for the brighter, more graphic colorways the silhouette has also carried over the years.The Cortez's place in Nike's history gives any updated version a context that most silhouette refreshes do not carry. As Nike's first shoe, it preceded the Waffle Racer, the Air Max, and everything that followed, making its design decisions formative rather than derivative. The toe box widening acknowledges that the original fit parameters were not universally optimal while respecting the design's fundamental character. It is a conservative update by any measure, but conservatism is appropriate when the silhouette being adjusted is the one that started everything.Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast

The Nike Cortez “Ironstone” Features a Widened Toebox

Name: Nike Cortez “Ironstone”
Colorway: Ironstone/Black-Baroque Brown
SKU: DM4044-005
MSRP: ¥13,860 JPY ($90 USD)
Release Date: Available now (Japan), TBC (Global)
Where to Buy: BILLY’S ENT (Japan)

Nike is updating the Cortez in an Ironstone/Black-Baroque Brown colorway. The silhouette, Nike's first shoe released in 1972, has been refreshed based on feedback with a wider toe box delivering improved comfort and fit while preserving the retro aesthetic that has kept it in continuous production for more than five decades.

The toe box widening is the update's most functionally significant change. The original Cortez's narrow forefoot has historically been one of the silhouette's more polarizing fit characteristics, and broadening that zone without altering the shoe's overall profile addresses a specific complaint without redesigning the shoe around it. The upper retains the same material combination of natural leather, synthetic leather, and synthetic fiber that has defined recent Cortez iterations, giving the shoe a layered surface quality that keeps the retro construction legible while allowing for the color variety that each new colorway requires.

The Ironstone/Black-Baroque Brown palette applies that layered material logic to a three-tone earthy combination. Ironstone, a muted grey-green, anchors the upper's base surfaces, with Black handling the overlays and branding details that give the silhouette its structural definition. Baroque Brown introduces warmth at specific points, providing the palette's most distinctive tonal departure and the detail that separates this colorway from a standard neutral two-tone. Together the three colors sit in a restrained range that suits the Cortez's 1972 runner heritage without reaching for the brighter, more graphic colorways the silhouette has also carried over the years.

The Cortez's place in Nike's history gives any updated version a context that most silhouette refreshes do not carry. As Nike's first shoe, it preceded the Waffle Racer, the Air Max, and everything that followed, making its design decisions formative rather than derivative. The toe box widening acknowledges that the original fit parameters were not universally optimal while respecting the design's fundamental character. It is a conservative update by any measure, but conservatism is appropriate when the silhouette being adjusted is the one that started everything.

Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast