Shoes named ‘Jesus shoes’ with holy water soles now selling for $4000

Shoes named ‘Jesus shoes’ with holy water soles now selling for $4000

A pair of ‘Jesus Shoes’ are on sale for $4,000 — and for that price, the lucky owner can literally walk on water. The shoes were designed by Brooklyn-

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A pair of ‘Jesus Shoes’ are on sale for $4,000 — and for that price, the lucky owner can literally walk on water. The shoes were designed by Brooklyn-based creative arts company MSCHF and they come with holy water in the soles.

MSCHF bought a normal pair of Nike Air Max 97 sneakers at market value, the company’s head of commerce, Daniel Greenberg, confirmed to CBS News. A plain pair of men’s Air Max 97s go for about $160, but MSCHF completely revamped the shoe and added a golden Jesus on a crucifix as a shoelace charm. MSCHF also sourced holy water from the River Jordan, which was blessed by a priest in Brooklyn and added it to the soles of the sneaker.

The new ‘Jesus Shoes’ went on sale for $1,425 last week and sold for that price within a minute, Greenberg said. The buyer has now listed the sneaker on the resale website, StockX for $4,000. Greenberg said the company does not personally know the buyer of the Jesus Shoe, but they are aware that person listed the sneaker on StockX.

MSCHF is a “a counter-culture media/product brand, playing in a gray area that isn’t yet defined by traditional approaches,” Greenberg said.

The company’s objective is to drop a new project every second and fourth Tuesday of the month.  Past projects include ‘Times Newer Roman,’ a new font that is the classic Times New Roman, only each letter is 5 to 10 percent bigger – making it easier for students to fill up the pages of their term papers. The company also created an internet plug-in that makes Wikipedia pages look like real sources — another cheat method for those who are still writing papers in school.

The Jesus Shoe, however, is possibly MSCHF’s most viral creation — and it received both positive and negative feedback. Greenberg says the shoes were designed as a response to ridiculous brand collaborations, such as Arizona Iced Tea and Adidas.
“We set out to take that to the next level. We asked ourselves, ‘What would a shoe collab with Jesus look like?’ Obviously, it should let you walk on water. ‘Well, how can we do that?’ You pump holy water into the pocket of a pair of Air Max 97’s and with that, you get Jesus Shoes — the holiest collab ever,” Greenberg said. “