Fake Jordans — Every Silhouette From the Chicago to the Last Shot
No sneaker brand in the rep market has the depth, the history, or the colorway mythology of fake jordans. Michael Jordan signed with Nike in 1984 for $500,000 — a deal that eventually produced 35+ numbered silhouettes, each tied to a specific season, a specific opponent, and in some cases, a single game-defining moment that collectors still reference forty years later.
Fake air jordans span the full arc: the AJ1, banned by the NBA in 1985 for its colorway and retroed in the Chicago and Bred makeups that dominate rep demand; the AJ3, the first model with a visible Air unit and elephant print panels; the AJ4 with its lace lock detailing — arguably the most-collected Jordan of all time; the AJ6, Jordan’s first championship shoe from the 1991 Finals; the AJ11 with patent leather foxing that debuted during MJ’s return from retirement; and the AJ14, the “Last Shot” shoe worn on June 14, 1998, when he hit the series-clinching jumper over Bryon Russell to seal Chicago’s sixth title.
Replica jordans are a precision category — colorway accuracy and material quality both matter equally. The construction tells that define each silhouette (elephant print depth, patent leather gloss level, strap placement, Boost unit visibility) are exactly where rep batches separate. Each model page covers those details directly.
Browse by silhouette: Fake Jordan 1 · Jordan 4 Reps · Jordan 11 Reps