Daily Press (Sunday)

Teen builds sneaker restoratio­n business amid the pandemic

- By Rita Price

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Antonio Davis, like so many teens, spent the early weeks of the pandemic unsure of what to do with himself. Then he switched off the television and started a business.

Laurise Johnson did the math. As an education specialist at an after-school program, she’s all about the math.

Binge-watching 16 seasons of “Grey’s Anatomy” adds up to about 60 days of television, Johnson discovered. Quite a feat, even for a bored teenager.

Johnson suppressed the urge to laugh a little. If it was true — and Antonio really had devoted that much of this spring’s COVID-19 shutdown to his favorite show — then Antonio’s mom, Misha McNeil, was right: something had to give.

“This has been hard on a lot of kids,” McNeil said. “I think he was just kind of over it at that point.”

McNeil reached out to Johnson, who knew Antonio well from their time together at Directions for Youth and Families, where the teen had served as a counselor-intraining. He was Johnson’s “right-hand man” until the pandemic shuttered buildings and shoved students’ worlds online.

“What can we do?” McNeil asked Johnson in a text.

Maybe, Johnson thought, this was the time for Antonio, a “sneaker head” with both flair and skill, to get serious.

Has he ever.

“I’m 15 and I go to Metro (Early College) High School,” Antonio now says when he introduces himself. “I’m also a small-business owner.”

With nudges and encouragem­ent from his family and from Johnson, Antonio shrugged off the coronaviru­s blues (and the TV) and set about becoming an entreprene­ur.

His sneaker restoratio­n business, marketed online via @kicksbyton­e_, hums along in the basement of his family’s home.

“He has real customers and real orders,” Johnson said. “I’m proud of him. He has so much potential.”

Antonio offers light cleaning and deep cleaning of sneakers, removing scuffs and stains and debris from shoes so that they look brand new, whether for wear or collecting. A light cleaning typically costs his customers about $20, and it’s about $25 for the deep clean.

He “re-ices” the soles of beloved Jordans and Yeezys in a UV light box. Sometimes, he applies new colors and designs with acrylic leather paint.

Finished products are neatly shrink-wrapped and tagged.

“I use social media, I go to thrift stores,” Antonio said. “I want to get bigger.” Sometimes his thrift store finds turn up worn sneakers that he then restores to sell.

His pace already has surprised his parents and older sister. “We’d come home and see this line of cars,” McNeil said, laughing. “I thought, ‘What’s going on?’ They were Antonio’s customers, dropping off and picking up shoes.”

The life skills and lessons that go along with running even a tiny business at a tender age are obvious, Johnson said. “It teaches accountabi­lity. If he says you’re going to get your shoes in 14 days, well, then, you’re going to want your shoes.”

 ?? ERIC ALBRECHT/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Antonio Davis reconditio­ns a pair of sneakers at his home. The sneaker side business gives him something more to do and earn some extra money during the pandemic.
ERIC ALBRECHT/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Antonio Davis reconditio­ns a pair of sneakers at his home. The sneaker side business gives him something more to do and earn some extra money during the pandemic.

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