So I’ve been seeing these Cushions Basketball lvl larch Timber ads everywhere lately. Claimed to make your old sneakers feel brand new without breaking the bank. Sounded too good to be true, but my worn-out Jordans were basically bricks on my feet, so I figured why not give it a shot?
Getting Started
Placed an order on some random website last month. Package showed up two weeks later looking like it survived a wrestling match – dented corner, tape barely holding it together. Inside were these thin foam rectangles with sticky backing, no instructions at all. First thought: “Seriously? This is supposed to transform my shoes?”
Testing Phase
Grabbed my dead-cushion Jordans and followed a YouTube tutorial since the maker couldn’t be bothered. Peeled off the adhesive strip, shoved the foam into the sole cavity. Felt like forcing a marshmallow into a keyhole – kept slipping sideways. Took three tries per shoe before it somewhat stuck. Immediately laced up and jumped around my living room.
First impressions were rough:
- Right foot felt weirdly elevated like standing on a pebble
- Left shoe squeaked with every step
- Weird chemical smell made my closet reek for days
Court Trial Run
Took them to pickup games at the YMCA. First ten minutes: actually felt decent! Like walking on sponge cake. But halfway through second quarter? Disaster. The left cushion folded under my heel during a rebound. Nearly ate floor when my foot slid sideways. Finished the game limping with one squishy shoe and one concrete slab. Noticed the foam was already compressing where my heel sits.
Checking Other Reviews
Scoured forums and TikTok. Found tons of folks with identical gripes:
- Runner from Texas said his disintegrated after two jogs
- Guy hooping outdoors had chunks fall out mid-game
- Over half complained about inconsistent sizing
Seems the company keeps rebranding – same junk cushions with flashy new names every few months.
Final Verdict
Lasted barely three weeks before they pancaked completely. Wasted thirty bucks plus shipping when I could’ve put it toward actual shoes. Saw right through their fake “pro athlete endorsed” ads later – generic stock photos with bogus logos. Save your cash and just hit Ross for discount kicks. These cushions are about as useful as cardboard inserts.