Astrae’s nostalgic campaign for Nike steers clear of sleek sports advertising

To launch Nike’s latest shoe by NBA star Ja Morant, the Copenhagen-based creative studio takes from the world of scrapbooks and family albums.

Date
24 April 2025

When Jake Kelly, art director at Nike, reached out to the Copenhagen-based branding studio Astrae about an upcoming project, his initial email didn’t let much on, founder Carl-Emil Storm tells us. “So, being a lifelong basketball fan, I was very excited when Jake opened the brief with a photo of Ja Morant on the first slide,” he says.

Tasked by Nike to create the graphic design for a campaign that would launch a new shoe by the NBA star, it was “a bit of a dream project” for Astrae, Carl-Emil says. The challenge of the project was to create something that didn’t feel too cliché, that cut through the overly sleek landscape of advertising in the field: “There are so many overused angles when it comes to visual storytelling around sports, and we wanted to create something that felt fresh and honest,” Carl-Emil says.

To kick things off, the studio spent a lot of time thinking about different letterforms and what meanings they might carry in campaign messaging. Uncovering a bit more insider knowledge on the basketball player, they came to understand Ja’s closeness to his family. “His dad, Tee Morant, built him a court in his grandma’s backyard, trained Ja and his friends from a young age, and now sits courtside at most of Ja’s games,” says Carl-Emil. The studio wanted their approach to be a stamp of this support – something that nodded to the nostalgic world of family scrapbooks and albums.

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Astrae Studio: Nike Ja 2 (Copyright © Nike, 2025)

But for a fast paced athlete things couldn’t become too “cutesy”, Carl-Emil says. The grit and intensity of the sport also needed to be communicated in the campaign. So they landed on punched type, often used for labels it has a stark but soft vintage feel. This allowed them to create an identity that was distinct but didn’t take too much away from the campaign’s main event: the imagery.

The studio’s graphic letters sit atop raw and gloriously grainy images from the NBA players archive of family photos: moments playing with family members and friends in his childhood home, contrasted with composite images of him mid dunk. These elements came together to create collages that have the air of old film strips cut together – their imperfections and light leaks merging to create dynamic compositions. The tagline ‘Get Up’, is a reference to both “Ja’s insane jumping abilities as one of the best dunkers in the league” but also a message about his past and his ability to “overcome adversity,” says Carl-Emil.

The project isn’t Astrae’s first venture into the world of sports, or even basketball. Their Chateau typeface, was used by LeBron and Savannah James for their collaboration on a limited edition honey, and the studio have recently embarked on a streetwear brand offshoot Astrae Sports, which takes an aesthetic view on the world of basketball.

This crossover of design and basketball has come up quite naturally for Carl-Emil across his career. Being a fan and a player, “I’ve always viewed the game through an aesthetic lens,” he says. “The culture around basketball is just as interesting to me as the game itself, it has strong ties to music, fashion, film, and art, and with Astrae Sports I wanted to create a brand that focuses on the intersection between sport and culture.” As for the Ja campaign, the designer hopes that the studio’s analogue approach will “resonate with and inspire” fellow fans of the sport.

GalleryAstrae Studio: Nike Ja 2 (Copyright © Nike, 2025)

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Astrae Studio: Nike Ja 2 (Copyright © Nike, 2025)

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About the Author

Ellis Tree

Ellis Tree (she/her) joined It’s Nice That as a junior writer in April 2024 after graduating from Kingston School of Art with a degree in Graphic Design. Across her research, writing and visual work she has a particular interest in printmaking, self-publishing and expanded approaches to photography.

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