Before Kim Kardashian’s NikeSkims Rift, the Split-Toe Sneaker Was for the Heads and the Weirdos


Before culture’s current torrid love affair with the five-finger shoe, we had the cloven-hoofed Nike Rift. Though it’s been around for just over 25 years now, its two toes remain firmly on fashion’s neck. Last night, Kim Kardashian gave a first look at the NikeSkims Rift shoe—an updated take on the split-toe silhouette and the first footwear from Skims and Nike’s partnership.

Kardashian chose to wear hers for two recent pap walks. First, at The Commons in Calabasas, pairing the black shoes with a Balenciaga leather bandeau and bomber jacket, Skims leggings, and nylon bottoms. Later, she styled a satin pair with a sleek Phoebe Philo jacket and Skims leggings. It’s not the first time Kardashian has shown a penchant for the split-toe: when attending the Maison Margiela haute couture spring 2024 show in Paris, she wore a black velvet pair of the brand’s own famed split-toe heels, a collaboration between Margiela and Christian Louboutin.

The Nike Air Rift officially launched in 1996 (just a few years after the Margiela tabi). The original shoe, designed by avid ultra-distance runner Kip Buck, took its name from Kenya’s Great Rift Valley (where the country splits in two), its functional design inspired by the country’s barefoot long-distance runners. The tabi shoe shape was a significant step toward the contemporary focus on natural-motion footwear—AKA the barefoot, five-toe styles like Vibram, which became something of a fashion phenomenon last year—often paired not with lycra and Alo sets but, contrastingly, more subversive, feminine ways of dressing. One of the wackier editions to the Nike archive, the Air Rift launched at a time when Nike was getting more experimental, extending the reach of its shoes beyond traditional realms of sport and athletes to create cross-lifestyle sneakers.

NikeSkims Rifts

The NikeSkims Rift shoe.

Photo: Courtesy of Nike

For years, it was a coveted lifestyle sneaker, beloved in Japan’s Harajuku circles and appearing in the cult FRUiTs magazine. (Japan has a natural kinship: the split-toe design can be traced back to the late Heian period and around 794.) It remained a rare find on resale sites and became a grail for many sneakerheads. The Nike Air Rift had its first official re-release in 2015, but it’s become more ubiquitous in retail in just the last few years. Slimmer and with a less chunky sole than its predecessors, variations just in the last year have included textured suede, double-buckle straps, and silky pink tie-up ribbons.

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