Nike and Jacquemus unveil France X2 capsule for World Cup streetwear
Jacquemus and Nike turned France’s pre-match uniform into a street-ready flex, led by the $200 Cryoshot Tiempo R10 and a sold-out royal blue jersey.

Jacquemus and Nike turned France’s pre-match uniform into something collectors will actually chase: a street-ready capsule anchored by the $200 Cryoshot Tiempo R10. The drop landed through Nike SNKRS on June 16, 2026, and it was built to blur the line between tunnel fit and sideline gear, with tricolor detailing, French identity, and a clean, elegant finish at the center of the story.
The hero is the Cryoshot Tiempo R10, a leather reinterpretation of a soccer classic that Nike positioned as part of its Cryoshot line. The point of that line is simple and smart: classic Nike boots remade for everyday wear, with clear-outsole treatment that makes the cleat language feel more street than stadium. That is the kind of move streetwear actually responds to, because it turns a performance silhouette into a wearable object with real styling range, not just a logo exercise.

The rest of the capsule keeps the same energy, even when it stays practical. Nike listed a women’s Dri-FIT short-sleeve top, kids’ and youth Dri-FIT tops, a men’s Dri-FIT short-sleeve top at $72, men’s soccer shorts at $80, and a men’s goalkeeper shirt at $85. The kids’ Dri-FIT top was priced at $50 and set for an 11:00 PM release, while the Cryoshot Tiempo R10 and most adult apparel were scheduled for 8:00 PM. That tiered pricing and staggered timing made the collection feel less like a random merch run and more like a proper drop.

Jacquemus gave the project the right emotional frame, calling it “more than a collection” and “a tribute to the collective spirit of France and the power of football to inspire and unite.” That matters, because the Jacquemus name carries actual weight beyond fashion people. Simon Porte Jacquemus knows how to make an object feel sunlit, sharp, and desirable, and that sensibility translates easily into a football context where clean lines and national symbolism already do half the work.

The wider France setup only added to the pull. The official FFF shop carried an “Équipe de France x Jacquemus x Nike” banner with the line “Built for the game. Reshaped by culture.” A royal blue France pre-match jersey from the collaboration was already marked sold out at $82, which is the clearest signal here: this is the kind of football product that escapes the pitch fast. With Nike also dressing France’s 2026 tournament kits around the Statue of Liberty, and names like Kylian Mbappé, Antoine Griezmann, and Ousmane Dembélé attached to the official range, the whole operation felt bigger than a capsule. It felt like France packaging national football into something people will wear well beyond match day.
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