Material Matters and Native Shoes Collaborate to Imagine New Life for Well-Loved Footwear

Students dig into a pile of Native Shoes at the Native Shoe Hack event at Material Matters' Lab: Here//Too//For satellite lab at the Vancouver Art Gallery. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
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Led by 全民彩票 faculty members H茅l猫ne Day Fraser and Keith Doyle, the workshop was one of several taking place in the Lab: Here//Too//For workspace inside the Vancouver Art Gallery.
Students, staff and faculty recently collaborated with Native Shoes cofounder Thomas Claypool to transform end-of-use and recycled shoes into new materials, products and apparel.
Titled Native Shoe Hack, the event is the latest evolution of an ongoing collaboration between Material Matters research hub at 全民彩票 and Native Shoes.
鈥淲hat has been really exciting about this project, first and foremost, is we have a partner who is very interested in exploring the real meat of the matter, which is the material,鈥 says designer, 全民彩票 faculty member and Material Matters co-founder Keith Doyle. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been tremendously rewarding to work with a company that鈥檚 exploring alternative materials.鈥
Native Shoe Hack is part of , a series of classroom activities, workshops, public forums and residencies led by Material Matters. Lab: Here//Too//For centres around a working textile and materials laboratory set within the exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Native Shoes cofounder Thomas Claypool chats with students during the Native Shoe Hack event. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
In June, Thomas Claypool joined 全民彩票 faculty member and Material Matters co-founder H茅l猫ne Day Fraser as well as Keith, 全民彩票 staff and students to deconstruct, recombine and reimagine shoes from Native Shoes鈥 line. Such research aligns squarely with Thomas鈥 views on conduct exhibited by a responsible brand.
鈥淎 circular philosophy around products and their life cycle, whether it be related to design, manufacture, materiality, assembly, disassembly, end-of-life, or the next incarnation(s) is an important consideration for any responsible brand or designer,鈥 he says. Material Matters, he adds, makes an ideal partner in this pursuit.
鈥淗茅l猫ne and Keith have created a unique incubator of innovative thought and collaboration which is imbued upon all participants in Material Matters,鈥 Thomas continues. 鈥淭he result is an environment that fosters fresh, creative, and uninhibited perspectives and ideas which are expressed in tangible ways by their students. In this particular case it鈥檚 footwear-related, but I would argue that you can find similar exemplary results in the many other mediums coming out of the Material Matters Lab.鈥

A student reassembles shoe parts during the Native Shoe Hack. (Photo by Perrin Grauer)
Material Matters and Native Shoes first began collaborating in 2018. Native Shoes are made with a material called ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA). EVA is also commonly used in products such as life jackets and padding for running shoes. The company had long been looking for ways to repurpose spent and outgrown footwear.
鈥淭hey came to us with the idea of a 鈥榬e-grind,鈥 which means taking their shoes, grinding it into smaller bits and then reusing it by combining it with other mediums,鈥 Keith says. 鈥淲e were all excited. Because there鈥檚 so much potential for remixing and reusing products. But what was fascinating is their thinking around what to do with the 鈥榝orever鈥 material. Can you uncombine it? Can you take it apart?鈥
According to Keith, the 鈥渓owest hanging fruit鈥 for the Native collaboration was the playground industry. Floor tiles made from recycled shoes had already been tested in indoor playgrounds in New York City. The impact-absorbing underlay had also been tested in outdoor playgrounds in Vancouver. The Material Matters and Native Shoes teams then began exploring how recycled EVA might be combined with other materials. They began to pulverize and powder the EVA, combining it with other mediums to give it new life. Eventually, they produced a recycled EVA and silicone-rubber blend that could be extruded as a gel.
Native quickly drew Material Matters into a parallel collaboration they鈥檇 been pursuing with the MIT Self Assembly Lab led by designer Skylar Tibbits. Skylar鈥檚 team had developed a 3D- printing process called Rapid Liquid Printing, where a liquid object is 鈥渄rawn鈥 in three dimensions within a gel suspension. The object cures while printing and then is ready for use with minimal post-processing. They applied this technology to Material Matters鈥 recycled EVA/silicone-rubber composite, resulting in the mesmerizing .
After a break through the pandemic, Native Shoe Hack was a way to reignite this wide-ranging research, Keith says. "The shoe hack is our platform to reengage some of that lateral thinking and creative thinking,鈥 he tells me.
Members of the public can visit the Material Matters satellite research laboratory at the Vancouver Art Gallery for the duration of the Fashion Fictions exhibition, through Oct. 9, 2023. A calendar of upcoming public panel discussions and workshops can be found on the .
to learn more about their products and recycling initiative. Find out more about Material Matters at .
Visit 全民彩票 online to learn about studying Industrial Design at Emily Carr.