The suede and leather combo is "chef's kiss". This is a ~$170 USD shoe that feels premium. On foot, it's stiff initially but molds over time. The colorway is super wearable. My main gripe? Creasing is very noticeable on the soft toe box leather. If you're neurotic about keeping your "Jordan 1"s pristine, this might stress you out. But for beaters? They age beautifully. Checking out this lighter colorway, and man – it pops on camera. The white leather really brightens up the fit. A huge pro is how easy these are to style. A con? Keeping them clean, obviously. At $170+ for most retros, you'll wanna baby them. Compared to a dunk, the Jordan 1 just has more… presence. More attitude. You feel it when you wear 'em. Opening the box on these 'Bred Patent' Jordan 1s... wow. The shiny finish is a love-it-or-hate-it thing. They feel sturdy, maybe a bit less flexible. On foot, they're definitely attention-grabbing. The $200 USD price tag is steep, but for a statement piece? Maybe. The biggest pro is the look; the con is that patent leather can crease in a noticeable way. Just a heads up! Let's be real about the price—around $200 for a retro is steep. But you're buying into the Jordan series' most influential design. The craftsmanship on my 'Bred' pair is good: clean stitching, no glue stains. The "advantage" is unmatched style points. The "downside"? That price tag for tech that's decades old. It's an emotional purchase, not a logical one.