cyber-industrial camel toe
Parisian fashion house Maison Margiela has collaborated with sportswear brand Reebok to launch a collection of high-heeled, split-toe (like a camel toe) trainers for the era of the “cyber-industrial revolution”. (Ok)
The shoe collection was launched during Maison Margiela‘s Spring-Summer 2020 Artisanal Co-ed show in Paris, each design is a cross between Reebok’s dynamic Instapump Fury trainer from 1994 and the French haute couture atelier’s signature Tabi shoe from 1988, which takes cues from the traditional Japanese split-toe sock. The resulting hybrid design retains the Instapump Fury’s futuristic aesthetic, with vibrant primary-colourways and geometric layering, but includes an additional split-toe (which I simply don’t understand and the block medium high heel.
While the Tabi’s split-toed calfskin upper forms the base of the shoes, Reebok’s “pump mechanism” inflation technology informs the rest of the design. This technology, which was initially developed by the sportswear brand in 1989, sees two small nodules embedded at the top of the shoe – one is a pump used to fill the top layer wrapped around the body of the shoe with air, while the other button next to it is used to deflate it.
According to Maison Margiela, this transformative function is representative of it’s key philosophies, making the collaboration a natural pairing. Like the original Reebok sneaker, the outer-sole and midsole are made from rubber and expansive foam. To grant both flexibility and stability, a sheet of Reebok’s Hexalite shock-absorbing cushioning material is integrated into the sole.
A Graphlite carbon-fibre rod is built into the bridge of the heeled versions of the shoes to connect the sole to the heel. The shoe has been launched in six different colour variations, including all-black or all-white, and various colourways of yellow, black and red, or white, blue and red. An all-black version of the shoe features a faux crocodile material with a clear pump patch.