Nike SB Lunar One Shot: A lightweight, data-driven skate shoe designed to maximize board feel and minimize break in time
Posted in: nikesb, skateboardshoes
While some purists still dispute Nike’s presence in skateboarding, there’s no denying their contribution to skate shoe design and development. The latest tech to reach the market lies within the Lunar One Shot, a…
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Nike Lunar Clayton Golf Shoe
Posted in: Clayton, golf, lunarAl prossimo green fee indossate queste Nike Lunar Clayton ispirate alle più tradizionali tomaie artigianali italiane con l’aggiunta di tecnologie d’avanguardia. Saranno disponibili nei colori nero o bianco in tutti i migliori retailer a partire da gennaio 2014.
Lambos for Your Legs
Posted in: Accessories & FashionUpon seeing Lamborghini’s wild Veneno concept, experienced shoe designer Jeremiah Obuobi felt compelled to design a shoe that embodied the same design language. The result is this wicked-looking runner that, like the Lambo, is focused on optimum aerodynamics and stability to achieve a equally dynamic experience when the wearer tackles the road on foot rather than by car.
Designer: Jeremiah Obuobi
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(Lambos for Your Legs was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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Danner Factory Tour: Behind the scenes at one of the world’s leading boot manufacturers
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Like many heritage brands, the Portland, Oregon-based boot manufacturer Danner Boots has enjoyed a recent surge in popularity. Danner was founded in 1932 as a manufacturer of top-of-the-line work and logging boots, but when Japanese footwear…
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Clarks Horween Chromexcel: The classic desert boot gets an upgrade with leather from Chicago’s famed tannery
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A quintessential piece of every man’s wardrobe—or, perhaps should be—Clarks desert boots’ history is as storied as the design is simple. While the classic suede offers the most timeless…
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Roots: From summer camp to the Olympics, a look at the Canadian clothing company’s spirited 40-year history
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What do David Bowie and a sporty varsity jacket have in common? Roots. In 1987 America’s Libraries tapped the music icon and reputed reader to pose for a literacy campaign, and Bowie was recordOutboundLink(this,…
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News: trainers with rubber loops on the soles to give extra spring have won the product design prize at a Swiss design awards (+ slideshow).
The running shoes first launched three years ago, by Swiss designer Thilo Alex Brunner for new Swiss sports brand On, won the award at the Design Prize Switzerland last week.
“The award is a big recognition for Thilo Alex Brunner and for On”, said On co-founder David Allemann. “In the tradition of functional and sleek Swiss design, the visual language of On is as unique as its groundbreaking technology. Function and form have been winning over elite athles and casual runners alike. Thilo has given On a face that is a radical departure from the crowded design of conventional running shoes.”
Flexible rubber sections on the soles, which the brand calls clouds, compress to act as shock absorbers when landing then lock together using small teeth to form firm pads for launching the body forward.
“Hollow pods on the sole of the shoe stretch back on impact to cushion the landing and then lock to form the solid foundation required for a powerful push-off,” said Allemann. “The result is a new running experience: fast, light and agile.”
Athletes including Ironman world champion Frederik Van Lierde and 2012 Olympic triathlon gold medalist Nicola Spirig have worn the shoes in competitive races.
Pairs are available with different uppers for different running distances, with a selection of bright laces and matching details.
Two product designs prizes were given out at the awards as part of the Market category for products available to purchase. The other winner was a swivelling lamp that clamps to the edge of a desk or shelf.
Photos are by Ingmar Swalue and Thomas Stöckli.
Read on for more information from the brand:
On wins the prestigious Design Prize Switzerland
The Swiss sports company On and designer Thilo Alex Brunner win the prize for best product design.
The young Swiss sports company On wins the prestigious Design Prize Switzerland. Thilo Alex Brunner, one of the most successful upcoming Swiss designers, impressed the international jury in the category Product Design Market.
“The award is a big recognition for Thilo Alex Brunner and for On”, explains David Allemann, co-founder of On. “In the tradition of functional and sleek Swiss design, the visual language of On is as unique as its groundbreaking technology. Function and form have been winning over elite athles and casual runners alike. Thilo has given On a face that is a radical departure from the crowded design of conventional running shoes.”
The high-calibre jury with Liesbeth in’t Hout, Ascan Mergenthaler, Jasper Morrison, Lars Müller and Robb Young selected from 300 entries. The jury about the winner On: “The market for running shoes is overcrowded and hotly contested – so when a new brand comes along and takes the market by storm, the innovation behind it must convey a promise which it manages to keep – a shoe with qualities never heard of before.
In this case a clever design idea has proved capable of competing against the million-strong budgets which the big brands in the industry assign to research and marketing. The straightforward design of the shoe deliberately refrains from indulgence in stylistic frills, and is wholly consistent in focusing on the basic functional requirements. The attention is drawn to the sole, which here constitutes the crucially important element.”
Land soft but push off hard – this is the radically new idea of On’s patented technology and far from self-evident. The merely three year old Swiss company is able to combine the best of soft yet slow training shoes and fast yet hard racing flats.
The post Running trainers with rubber loops
on the soles win Swiss design prize appeared first on Dezeen.
These shoes by Australian design studio Sibling allow the wearer to instantly erect a temporary shelter by unfurling a tent from round their ankles and pulling it over their head.
The Walking Shelter by Sibling untucks from net pockets around the back of a pair trainers.
Bright pink and purple waterproof sheets can be released from each shoe then attached together with Velcro.
The tent is then put over the head and worn like a hooded poncho, with arms stuck out through holes in the sides.
When sitting down, the body forms the supporting structure inside instead of poles or guy ropes, though feet and hands remain exposed.
Loops around the bottom edge can be used to peg the material to the ground to stop it flapping around.
A flap in the front with a mosquito net layer can be zipped up to protect the body from the elements and insects or left open to reveal who is inside and let them see out.
“The shelter accommodates for the body in a variety of ways and can be customised by the user to adapt to a variety of contexts and environments,” said the designers.
After it stops raining, the shelter can be scrunched up back into the pockets and user can continue their walk.
The project was developed as a prototype and auctioned off to raise money for Australian children’s charity Little Seeds Big Trees. Photos are by tin&ed.
The post Walking Shelter shoes by Sibling
transform into a tent appeared first on Dezeen.
London College of Fashion graduate Barbora Veselá has layered-up leftover scraps of leather to create striations based on rock formations on the surface of these shoes (+ movie).
Barbora Veselá looked to the patterns of eroded sedimentary rocks at the Prokopské údolí nature reserve in the Czech Republic when creating her Geology of Shoes footwear.
“The project takes inspiration from sediment layers and from effects of erosive processes in nature as well as from traditional shoe making techniques,” said Veselá.
By overlapping spare strips of leather suede-side-up around a traditional last, she built up the shape of the shoes piece by piece.
Veselá then sanded down the scraps to create the final forms and reveal the rippled layers. As the odds and ends of material are always different shapes, each shoe is unique.
The colours of the stripes were influenced by shaded contours found on old geological maps. The footwear formed Veselá’s final project at Cordwainers College, part of the London College of Fashion.
Striations also feature in Zaha Hadid’s chrome-plated shoes with cantilevered heels for United Nude and we recently compiled a roundup of our stories about strata in architecture and design.
Film and photography are by Petr Krejčí.
The post Geology of Shoes by
Barbora Veselá appeared first on Dezeen.