
Melissa Chanel knows there is power in numbers. So when the content creator started getting into sneakers — a space so often dominated by exclusivity and know-it-all men — she knew she didn’t have to do it alone.
“I grew up in a very small town where the community was everything,” Chanel told HuffPost, “so I wanted to cultivate that community around sneakers, and let other women know there are women like us that have that same passion for sneakers. That love sneakers, love learning about them, educating themselves on them, creating sneakers. Women work everywhere, from Foot Locker all the way to Nike.”
The founder of Kicks & Fros, a sneaker collective celebrating Black women, Chanel is busting open sneaker culture and encouraging women everywhere to ditch tired of stereotypes of femininity to embrace their own style.
“Being a younger kid, your family always separated, ‘This is for girls’ and ‘This is for boys,’ and I feel like that kind of bled over into sneaker culture,” she said. “A lot of young girls weren’t wearing bulkier basketball sneakers like Jordans and Scottie Pippens. They weren’t as dainty.”
Chanel knows these deep-seated ideas about who’s allowed to wear certain shoes can make it challenging for women and non-cis dudes to feel comfortable engaging with sneaker culture. Encouraging women to be comfortable learning about and styling sneakers is the mission of Kicks & Fros, which has a podcast, style blogs, sneaker guides and, now, in-person events, all centered on celebrating women, specifically Black women, and sneakers.
Given that sneakers are shoes designed for comfort, Chanel laughs at the implicit irony in the gatekeeping and elitism that happens in sneaker culture.
“Sneakers bring comfort,” Chanel said. “If you like comfort, this is where you need to be. I always tell people, wear what you like. It doesn’t have to be the latest Jordans. Don’t be so caught up in the proper names, or ’Is this shoe cool?′ — you make it cool. You bring that cool factor to the sneaker.”

These come in a ton of colors of sizes, including women's 5-12 and men's 6-15. Pictured are the Concepts x Air Max 1 Mellow, $170 which drop on March 12 in the Nike Snkrs app.
These are men's shoes that come in sizes 4-13 and in six colors. Pictured is the Nimbus Cloud.
"If I have to sit there and spent 15 minutes to get it on, I don't want to wear that. And there are certain collectors who don't care about that, and I get it. But like, I don't want to spend that much time getting my shoes on. I don't care how cool they are, how collectible they are. I don't want to spend that time. So when I can find ones that look cool, fit well and are easy to get on — that's like the golden ticket." — Dalessandro.
These come in nine colors in women's 5-11. Pictured is the Fluid Blue.
"Converse has been killing it, too. I don't know if you're into platform shoes, but they have this high-top with a thick platform. I've seen men and women killing it. So the rules are changing. I'm here for it." — Golden
These come in women's 5-11.
"They happen to be very trendy right now. That was not the case maybe four or five years ago. I still liked them, by they were not the moment. But now they are! So might as well take advantage of that, ride that wave that a super wide-foot friendly speaker is trendy. Take advantage of that." — Dalessandro
Air Force 1s come in a ton of colors and patterns in women's 5-12. Pictured is the Fontanka in Sail/Green Strike, $110.
These are unisex shoes that come in 16 colors and in women's 5-16. Pictured is Ftwr White.
These come in many colors and patterns in women's 5-11. Pictured is the "Animal" print, $75.