Revolt In Style… or not at all!
Words: Brian Terhorst
Photos: Rosie Marks for Vans
A lot of brands want to live in the space where music, skateboarding, and style collide. Vans still looks like it owns property there.
That is the takeaway from the brand’s new Off The Wall campaign, which puts the Authentic back in the spotlight with a lineup that actually feels believable – SZA, Hayley Williams, Franz Lyons, Travis Barker, Lizzie Armanto, and T-Funk. No forced cool. No desperate trend-chasing. No trying to convince people a brand is connected to culture because somebody in marketing threw together a mood board and called it a movement.
The Authentic is a perfect example. It is not some bloated, over-designed “statement” sneaker screaming for attention. It is stripped down, low-key, and still somehow louder than half the shoes fighting for relevance right now. That is probably why it has lasted. In 2026, the Authentic hits 60 years, and instead of feeling dusty, it still looks like the kind of shoe that belongs in a skate bag, at a show, or kicked off under a beat-up couch after a long night.
That kind of longevity is not an accident. It comes from being adopted, thrashed, reworked, and worn by people who actually shape culture instead of just posing next to it.
This campaign gets that. SZA brings range and modern reach. Hayley Williams still carries her own lane with zero compromise. Franz Lyons adds that raw edge from the heavier side of the scene. Travis Barker is basically permanent ink in the DNA of punk-meets-mainstream crossover. Lizzie Armanto and T-Funk keep the whole thing grounded where it matters – on grip tape, concrete, and actual style that was not born under fluorescent office lighting.
That is where Vans still wins. It understands that crossover is not about checking boxes. It is about credibility. It is about knowing that skateboarding, music, and personal style all feed off the same energy – independence, attitude, and not giving a damn about fitting into the clean little categories other brands still cling to.
And while plenty of companies are busy inflating silhouettes, pumping out forgettable collaborations, and dressing up identity as strategy, Vans is over here reminding everyone that a simple canvas shoe can still carry more personality than an entire wall of hype releases.
The timing matters, too. Since naming SZA Artistic Director in 2025, Vans has clearly been leaning into a broader creative identity without cutting the legs out from under its core. That is a hard balance to hit. Usually when legacy brands try to evolve, they either water themselves down or start acting like they just discovered the culture that built them. Vans, at least here, avoids both traps.
The formula is still stupidly effective – good shoe, strong personalities, real roots, no corporate cosplay.
That is why Vans still owns the crossover lane. Not because it is louder. Not because it is newer. Because when the dust settles, it still feels real – and in 2026 that might be the rarest thing a brand can pull off.