LEGO x Nike Air Max 95 Set
Release Date: March 28th, 2026
Build what you wear. The LEGO x Nike Air Max 95 Set brings together two of the twentieth century's most enduring design objects in a collaboration that operates on two levels simultaneously — a wearable Air Max 95 rendered in the LEGO color system, and a buildable LEGO set that reconstructs the shoe in brick form with the precision of a design team that took both objects equally seriously. This is not a co-branded product. It is a dialogue between two philosophies of creativity that have more in common than either would have predicted.
The wearable Air Max 95 arrives in the primary color palette that LEGO has made universally recognizable since 1958 — signal red, classic yellow, brick blue, and LEGO white moving across the 95's iconic layered upper construction in the color-blocked arrangement that references the brick system's fundamental visual language. Each panel corresponds to a LEGO color with the specificity of a design decision made by people who understand both the Air Max 95's construction and the LEGO color taxonomy in equal depth — not a casual reference but a considered translation of one design system into another. The Big Bubble forefoot Air unit and the 95's full cushioning platform deliver the wearable performance beneath the collaborative exterior, the shoe as functional as it is conceptual.
The buildable set reconstructs the Air Max 95 in brick form with the lateral profile accuracy and color fidelity that LEGO's design team has brought to its Architecture and Icons series — a display object that earns its place on the shelf next to the shoe it represents, the two objects in conversation across the media of foam and plastic, cushioning and stud. The LEGO x Nike Air Max 95 Set is for the collector who has always believed that the best things in their life were designed, the builder who has always worn their creativity, and the person who has never seen a reason why those two identities should be separate. They were always the same person. This set proves it.