• Sneakers
  • Blog
  • Vintage Ads
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Search
Menu

The Deffest®. A vintage and retro sneaker blog.

  • Sneakers
  • Blog
  • Vintage Ads
  • Shop
  • About
  • Contact
  • Search
Osaga KT-26 1980 vintage sneaker ad @ The Deffest

Osaga KT-26 1980 vintage running shoe ad

October 31, 2018

Here's a 1980 vintage ad for the Osaga KT-26 running shoes with the awesome ⬅️ ⬆️ side profile logo. This shoe had the "Cantilever Principle" that "increased shock absorption while offering greater control." This original vintage Osaga running shoe ad is available over at our Rewind Running web shop.

Ad info is below:

OSAGA PERFORMANCE INTRODUCES THE HIGHWAY SAFETY ACT FOR 1980 

GOOD ADVICE ABOUT THE ROAD AHEAD: At the threshold of this decade, Osaga Performance introduced a running shoe based on a revolutionary principle developed through bio-mechanical research. The KT-26 incorporates the "Cantilever Principle" and combines it with state of the art construction and quality materials resulting in better foot protection for the serious runner. The Osaga Performance KT-26 has increased shock absorption while offering greater control, and those two qualities alone are what it's really all about. We researched it, designed it, tested it and now it has been proven, rated and accepted. The rest is up to you. You can buy a running shoe that reduces shock and increases stability. A running shoe designed for lightness, flexibility and durability-- all the qualities you require for serious performance. Or you can buy something of less value. The KT-26. It's for the challenge of the 80's, and Osaga Performance wants you to win.

Osaga Performance

RW5-STAR

*****

Runner's World Magazine

OSAGA INC., 2468 WEST 11th AVE., EUGENE, OR 97402 (503) 484-1344

In sneaker history, The Deffest Tags vintage, sneakers, osaga, osaga kt-26, kt-26, kt26, vintage osaga, osaga shoes, osaga sneakers, vintage sneakers, sneakerhead, running shoes, vintage runners, vintage running shoes, 1980s shoes, 1980s sneakers, 1980s running shoes, retro, retro sneakers, classic sneakers, vintage advertising, vintage ad, sneaker history, old school sneakers, 1980, 1980 ad, 1980s, 80s, 80s sneakers, 80s fashion, old school, 70s running shoes, rare sneakers, obscure sneakers, rare vintage sneakers, obscure vintage sneakers, rare running shoes, eugene Oregon, Cantilever sole, Cantilevered sole
Osaga KT-26 REVOLUTION 1979 vintage sneaker ad @ The Deffest

Osaga KT-26 REVOLUTION vintage sneaker ad ​from 1979

August 31, 2018

Osaga KT-26 REVOLUTION vintage sneaker ad from 1979. The Osaga KT-26 is a cult classic sneaker only known to a few and are now rare collector items that sell used for upwards of $300-$1000 a pair. This original vintage magazine ad is available over at our Rewind Running web shop.

We were able to piece together a brand profile from "TonyK" on the Letsrun.com forum board who posted an excellent detailed account of Osaga’s history way back in 2009. Tony’s write up:

I somehow landed on your sight today and saw your comments about OSAGA. I was one of the first people to market OSAGA in the United States and was there from day one. Most of the comments and responses you received are a bit off target. The company was started about three months after a small company by the name of "Blue Ribbon Sports" or, as the name you may know better as "NIKE". It was started by a family shoe store retailer by the name of Bill Combs in Eugene, Oregon. Although he has passed, his stores are still there and are called "Burchs Fine Shoes". we were around Bill Bowerman several times because he was a good friend of Bill Combs. We would all go to dinner during big meets such as NCAA Cross Country championships, etc.

Almost all of the shoes had names beginning with the letter "C" as research found that those words were the easiest to remember. Names like Capra (which is the brightly colored shoes your responders are talking about), Cortina, Columbia and Cochise, which was meant to compete with the Adidas Country and was green and white as well.

The logo colors where Green and Yellow, but not because of Oregon. Once again, marketing research said those were the most pleasing colors. Osaga was the first company to put emphasis on matching warm-ups, bags, hats, shirts, etc to the shoe colors.

The original idea of the company was that the shoes would be world class running and athletic shoes but not be sold in sporting goods stores and would be made available only to family shoe stores. As you might guess this took away the opportunity to have athletes as spokespersons. Alberto Salazar is the only "major" runner to have worn the shoes and that only happed for a very short time.

Your responders are right that the technology morphed into Avia. OSAGA developed a shoe called the KT-26 which was rated the #2 running shoe in the world as rated by Runner's World magazine. Although the shoes could then be found in some Athletes Foot stores, there was no base of well known runners in sponsored by OSAGA to really maximize the potential for expansion. At that time Bill Combs was running out of money and the writing was on the wall. The company was closed and the technology of the KT-26 Cantilever sole was sold to Avia for a small amount of money.

Oddly enough, the best shoe OSAGA Ever produced was called the OSAGA 2000 which,at the time, was the lightest weight tennis shoe ever produced. It used lightweight materials that are common place today but were evolutionary at that time.

OSAGA was named after the Osage Native American Indians from Oklahoma and the tag line was "For the Human Race".

This other small excerpt on Osaga is from the book Out of Nowhere: The Inside Story of how Nike Marketed the Culture of Running by Geoff Hollister:

In three days, my staff member Peter Thompson and I were flying to Madison, Wisconsin for NCAA cross country. We immediately ran into Burch's Bill Combs of Eugene who decided if Phil Knight can do it, he could too. Burch's was the top shoe store in Eugene, and Combs started his own brand, naming it Osaga. He put money into Dellinger's scoreboard at Hayward Field, which we had turned down. Bowerman was irate at his successor's decision. Now Combs was at the NCAA meet, sponsoring a breakfast for athletes in an attempt to draw attention to his poorly built training flats.

Ouch.

In vintage sneaker ads, The Deffest Tags vintage, sneakers, osaga, osaga kt-26, kt-26, kt26, vintage osaga, osaga shoes, osaga sneakers, vintage sneakers, sneakerhead, running shoes, vintage runners, vintage running shoes, 1970s shoes, 1970s sneakers, 1970s running shoes, retro, retro sneakers, classic sneakers, vintage advertising, vintage ad, sneaker history, old school sneakers, 1979, 1979 ad, 1970s, 70s, 70s sneakers, 70s fashion, old school, 70s running shoes, rare sneakers, obscure sneakers, rare vintage sneakers, obscure vintage sneakers, rare running shoes, eugene oregon, cult sneakers, bill combs, bill bowerman, Osaga KT-26, Osaga vintage shoes, Osaga vintage sneaker ad

Affiliate Disclosure