€135,00
Personalized sneakers reflecting the great work of the ELA association! Colorful Converse sneakers with the slogan “Put on your sneakers”!
By purchasing this pair of personalized sneakers, you are supporting the ELA , which supports families and funds research into leukodystrophy . Learn more
Please note , this product is personalized and cannot be returned or exchanged.
Shipping deadline:
3 to 4 weeks
The ELA family association fights against leukodystrophy, a rare and serious disease that affects children from birth. ELA is committed to providing families with moral support and offers considerable financial, administrative, technical, psychological, and social assistance. But that's not all! The association also supports research to find a cure for this disease and is expanding its work internationally. Finally, ELA raises public awareness of this disease through various events.
How can you support the ELA association on a personal level? With the " Put on your sneakers " campaign, of course! Every year, ELA invites schools and businesses to take as many steps as possible to support the association. It's a simple activity to organize that provides significant help to ELA.
Double G Customs has chosen to show its support for ELA by donating 10% of the price of its custom sneakers to the charity. These donations will help the organization carry out its missions.
A new customization on Converse sneakers to support the ELA association! The sneakers are not only in ELA's colors, but the design also incorporates the slogan "Put on your sneakers" from their major campaign. A cool pair of colorful sneakers to help children with illnesses take as many steps as possible!
The Converse sneakers are personalized using the slogan “Put on your sneakers” from the ELA association's campaign! The sneakers are in ELA association colors!
Comfortable sneakers to wear when participating in the “Put on your sneakers” campaign by the ELA association!
The Converse All Star was born in 1915 from the “Converse Rubber Shoe Company,” which we know today as “Converse.” At the time, the company specialized in manufacturing rubber clogs worn, among others, by inmates in American prisons. Initially, the model was called the “A11 Star” and designed for basketball.
To promote its model in American universities, Converse enlisted the help of basketball player Chuck Taylor in 1921. Chuck then assembled a team called the “All Stars” to tour universities and give demonstrations. The success was so great that the model was renamed “All Star” in reference to this team.
It wasn't until 1932 that Converse changed the name of this model to “Chuck Taylor All Star” to honor the basketball player who created the legend of this now-iconic shoe. The Converse Chuck Taylor became the must-have shoe for all basketball players until the end of the 1960s.
These star shoes of the basketball court also managed to gain popularity outside of sports circles as early as 1950, thanks in particular to James Dean, who wore a pair of "Chuck Taylor All Stars" in the film "Rebel Without a Cause." But it wasn't until 1969, with the death of the late Chuck Taylor, that Converse established itself as THE iconic sneaker it is today.
Converse Chuck Taylors also permeated the world of music. Big names like Elvis Presley, Kurt Cobain, the members of the Rolling Stones, and The Who contributed to the legend of this shoe.
Despite its success, sales declined in the 2000s, and the brand finally accepted Nike's acquisition offer in 2003. This acquisition does not signal the death of Converse, quite the contrary, since Nike is making all its technological know-how in sneakers available to the brand by releasing the Converse Chuck Taylor All Star II in 2016, a much more comfortable and resistant version of the original Chuck Taylor All Star.



