VNDS shoes cannot be "worn" more than once.
That would make them "NDS" no matter how light the wear.
VNDS means worn very lightly one time for a brief amount of time. Strictly speaking, there are some that will not consider a pair of shoes VNDS if they have been worn for any reason other than...
Legit.
I wouldn't worry about those production dates. It is more common than many think. I don't have my pair any longer to look at production dates, but in my years of buying Jordans, it has always been a common occurrence.
The upcoming XI's really overshadowed the III's last year here...I'm hoping for the sake of local heads and all nationwide that you experience something similar, because if not and with poor planning on JB's part, this could become madness.
Last year we were able to walk into FTL the day after...
Take my response with a grain of salt, that's my caveat because I think the market on these older retros is quite inflated, especially this particular model with all of its paint issues.
But, these DS, truly DS meaning never tried on, not worn once, worn around the house, etc etc...but, truly...
Dude, just stop. If you're calling B-grades or Factory Variants, please list your three reasons. What's differentiating them from production runs that were sold on RD? That tag date is not a valid method of calling them B-grades or Pre-release AR pairs etc...
Listen to aphexacid OP, he is...
There was a big argument about these when they first dropped, because there were some serious replicas coming out that DRO3000 exposed, that if you didn't really tear the shoe apart, there was no way to tell if they were Nike Factory production models or bootlegs.
Personally, I've given up on...
I just sold an NDS pair to my homeboy for $75.
That's family pricing right there. But, I liked the Lakers VI's. I thought they did a decent job on them.
DS, on the market right now, look to pay anywhere between $150-170.