You’ve in all probability seen them by now in your social media. They’re exhausting to overlook. These massive purple boots are in all places, and never simply on celebrities. The thermoplastic polyurethane rubber-shelled boots are straight out of a world like Roger Rabbit’s, the place the traces between cartoons and people are blurred.
And in keeping with the style model that makes them, that’s the purpose.
“Cartoon boots for a cool 3D world,” reads the Huge Pink Boot product description on MSCHF’s web site. “Cartoonishness is an abstraction that frees us from the constraints of actuality. Should you kick somebody in these boots they go BOING!”
Right here’s what you should find out about this season’s hottest — and perhaps most debated? — trend pattern.
Who’s carrying them?
Actor and musician Janelle Monáe just lately shot some hoops in her massive purple boots. Producer Diplo was trolled on-line for donning a pair on the New York Knicks sport Monday night time. TikTok and Instagram trend influencers are carrying them. Rappers Wealthy the Child and Lil’ Wayne and basketball participant Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — they’re all rocking the buzzy boots too.
Rapper Coi Leray danced round within the sought-after shoe when she carried out “Gamers” on the Brooklyn Nets halftime present final week. Fellow musician Iggy Azalea tweeted, “Joyful massive purple boot day” alongside a photograph of herself in teeny purple lingerie, which she paired together with her huge purple boots.
WWE wrestler Seth “Freakin” Rollins kicked Austin Concept within the face together with his massive purple boot throughout an episode of “Uncooked” this week. (Concept didn’t go BOING!)
Who makes them?
MSCHF, an artwork collective based mostly in Brooklyn, is the corporate behind the boot. Former BuzzFeed worker Gabriel Whaley, who based the collective in 2016, instructed Insider in 2020 that his firm couldn’t be outlined and that he and his colleagues have been “followers of mischief.”
MSCHF was additionally accountable for the AI-generated toes pictures and Lil Nas X’s notorious “Devil Footwear” — a Nike Air Max 97 knockoff stated to be made with a drop of human blood. After each pair of “Devil Footwear” bought out in lower than a minute, Nike sued the corporate for trademark infringement.
When did they begin turning into standard?
The large purple boot stepped onto the scene earlier this month earlier than they turned obtainable to the general public. Celebrities and influencers began to look in pictures and movies carrying a pair so outrageous they couldn’t be ignored.

Mannequin Sarah Snyder wears a pair of MSCHF’s Huge Pink Boots.
(Garrett Bruce)
How a lot do they price?
The boots went on sale for $350 on Thursday at 8 a.m. Pacific and bought out “mainly immediately,” MSCHF co-founder Daniel Greenberg instructed The Occasions through e mail.
The place can I purchase them?
Though they’re bought out by means of MSCHF’s on-line retailer, they’re nonetheless obtainable by means of resale web sites. Ebay has just a few listings starting from $675 to $1,224. Poshmark can also be promoting a pair for $1,200. Requested when the boots can be obtainable by means of MSCHF once more, Greenberg stated, “Not likely certain what the longer term holds.”
Does the web love or detest them?
Social media is giving the funky footwear blended critiques. TikTok consumer @lilap posted a video of a person seemingly caught being dragged throughout the ground whereas two girls tried to take away the boots. “Rattling, that’s dumb,” the person within the video stated. “I might by no means get these. Yo, my foot is sweaty!”
@Power106LA tweeted a video of a person dressed like Cupid strolling throughout the road within the massive purple boots with the caption, “NAAAHHHHH what’s happening with the MSCHF Huge Pink Boots?!”
And @Lexnthecityyy tweeted a video of TikTok trend influencer Knowledge Kaye exhibiting off his kicks with the caption, “Individuals cannot sit right here and inform me these massive purple boots will not be cute and enjoyable.”