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7-Eleven sues Nike over Air Max with Slurpee maker's colors

WASHINGTON, July 2 - 7-Eleven has sued Nike in federal court in Texas, accusing the sportswear giant of copying the convenience store chain's signature orange, green and ​red stripe design on a sneaker that Nike plans to release on July 11, ‌known as "7-Eleven Day."

7-Eleven sues Nike over Air Max with Slurpee maker's colors
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WASHINGTON, July 2 - 7-Eleven has sued Nike in federal court in Texas, accusing the sportswear giant of copying the convenience store chain's signature orange, green and ​red stripe design on a sneaker that Nike plans to release on July 11, ‌known as "7-Eleven Day."

In its lawsuit filed on Wednesday in the federal court in Dallas, 7-Eleven said Nike’s upcoming Air Max 95 shoe features a “confusingly similar imitation” of the company’s tri-color stripe branding, which it says consumers associate with the 7-Eleven ​brand.

Irving, Texas-based 7-Eleven said Nike scheduled the shoe's release for July 11, a date it ​said is widely associated with the retailer's annual "7-Eleven Day" promotion and Free Slurpee Day ⁠at participating stores. Slurpees are frozen, slushy drinks made with flavored syrup.

“Nike has shown a callous ​and malicious disregard for 7-Eleven’s rights,” the lawsuit said.Nike did not immediately respond to a request for ​comment.

In a statement, 7-Eleven said "based on the unauthorized use of our brand along with the impending launch in a matter of days on our birthday, 7-Eleven Day (7/11), we had to act quickly and decisively to protect our brand."

7-Eleven said it ​repeatedly tried to resolve the dispute before filing the lawsuit, but Nike indicated that it would ​continue advertising the shoe and proceed with the planned July 11 launch, according to the lawsuit.

The retailer said it has ‌used ⁠the orange, green and red color combination for decades in store signage, advertising, merchandise, footwear and other products, and owns many trademark registrations for the design.In the lawsuit, 7-Eleven alleges Nike intentionally designed the shoe to evoke the retailer and benefit from its brand recognition. Consumers are likely to mistakenly believe the ​shoe was sponsored or ​endorsed by 7-Eleven, even ⁠though no partnership exists, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit points to media reports describing the shoe as inspired by 7-Eleven.

The retailer is seeking a court ​order blocking Nike’s sales of the shoe, and a recall of products already ​distributed. 7-Eleven ⁠also said it wants monetary damages and Nike’s profits from sales of the footwear.

The case is 7-Eleven Inc v. Nike Inc, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, No. 3:26-cv-02201-X.

Source: Reuters; 7-Eleven sues Nike over Air Max with Slurpee maker's colors, uly 3, 2026: https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/7-eleven-sues-nike-over-air-max-with-slurpee-makers-colors-2026-07-02/