Author Topic: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes  (Read 5364 times)

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #30 on: January 14, 2024, 05:01:03 AM »
NYT ARTICLE FROM 2022

MILAN — The kings of our casual-attire era, sneakers have long been landfill fodder of cheap fabrication. Golden Goose, a maverick footwear enterprise, would like to propose an alternative: handicraft and repair.

With its flagship in Milan’s upmarket Brera neighborhood newly expanded and redesigned to accommodate workshops for cobblers and embroiderers, the brand best known for introducing $500 artisan-made sneakers is now offering in-store bespoke repairs that can run over $100. But despite the high-end pricing, the model may serve as a blueprint for fashion companies looking to extend the lifetime of their products.

“Artisans are able to produce uniqueness with their hands,” Silvio Campara, Golden Goose’s chief executive, recently offered as an explanation of the sneakers’ eye-popping costs as he leaned on a workshop counter at the rear of his brand’s revamped boutique. “And artisanship creates affection.”

It also explains the business incentive to give artisans in their 20s and 30s a starring role at the flagship. In a well-outfitted atelier, a team of cobblers cleans, restitches and resoles shoes — especially sneakers — amid polishing wheels, leather-sewing machines and an ozone sanitizing closet, surrounded by the heady turpentine scent of glue on rubber. In another corner of the store, lined with drawers of rhinestones and rows of ribbon rolls, embroiderers sew patches on jeans and other clothing and stitch hearts, flowers and other whimsical designs onto sneakers — Golden Goose’s first venture into customization.

“Our goal is to renew the dignity of artisans,” Mr. Campara said, holding up a half-repaired sneaker with the nailheads of its hand-hammered insole exposed. “It was a difficult task to find 20 young people who wanted to work as cobblers today,” he added, but they were ultimately convinced that as part of Golden Goose’s repair program, “they’re shaping the future of fashion.”

“I’ll be thrilled if other brands try to copy us,” he said.

Buoyant and self-assured, Mr. Campara sported ripped white jeans spangled all over with pearls and rhinestones while showing off Golden Goose’s renovated flagship last month. He has a habit of winking when he’s bragging, as when he proclaimed, “We’re way ahead.” (Wink.) “Everyone else is outdated.”

The cobblers behind him, in denim jumpsuits with their official title — “Dream Maker” — patched in capitals across their back, removed sneakers from a specialized oven that heats the rubber so the foxing, the strip that wraps some sneaker styles, can be peeled away and replaced along with the outsole.

“Five years ago, sneaker repair didn’t exist,” said Alessandro Pastore, a cobbler who formerly led production for factories making shoes for brands including Louis Vuitton, Jimmy Choo and Christian Louboutin. “There isn’t a single luxury boutique that offers this kind of repair service.” He began hammering rubber into place on a stake-mounted sneaker. “We are the first, and we are unique, and it makes us feel truly important.” (At that, Mr. Campara high-fived him from across the counter.)

The brand, founded in 2000 by Francesca Rinaldo and Alessandro Gallo, applied an old-fashioned approach to manufacturing sneakers: Instead of vulcanizing a rubber sole to encase the shoe’s top portion — the customary quick fix for sneaker production in Asia — Golden Goose looked to the cordwainers of its home territory of Veneto, a region renowned for formal shoes handcrafted according to tradition, where several luxury fashion houses have established factories to take advantage of local footwear artisanship. Golden Goose devised sneakers with the same individually sewn uppers and hand-hammered soles found in formal shoes, and today it fabricates more than a million pairs of sneakers a year using traditional techniques in eight factories in Veneto and around Italy. “We’re the best,” Mr. Campara said with another wink, “because we’re Italian. We have the craftsmanship in this country that produces the world’s luxury goods.”

In the Milan boutique, window shelves display pairs of half-rehabbed sneakers. The befores and afters can be difficult to discern without studying the soles, however, as the sneakers themselves — in keeping with Golden Goose’s philosophy of “perfect imperfection” — proudly bear deliberate scuffs, tears, frays and inked-on graffiti. At the laundering station in the cobblers’ workshop, dozens of jars indicate the range of shades needed in white paint alone, from snow to smoggy, to match the effects of wear. A price board of artisan sneaker services advertises the apparently popular “Lived-In Treatment.” The cost: 70 euros, about the same in dollars.

The shop is an elegy to this timeworn aesthetic: Clothing collections inspired by varsity sports and Americana feature patches, holes and mended rips; Blondie, Duran Duran, INXS and other heroes of the 1980s play on the sound system; shelves are artfully arranged with roller skates, analog cameras, vinyl records and cassette tapes displayed in cases like pinned butterflies.

As physical boutiques struggle for significance in the age of online shopping, the new Golden Goose model is drawing visitors with its craft services, and the sneaker maker plans to open similar concept shops in New York and Dubai later this year. Though repairs are typically considered a loss for brands, Mr. Campara insists that the approach is good for business.

“Someone who feels taken care of will always return, and repairs help keep my products in your life and in your memory,” he explained. Customers spend time in the store, tell people about their experience and, he said candidly, often buy more sneakers when they come in to spruce up their previous pair.

As for the strategy’s sustainability merits, clients showed up with 38 pairs of sneakers to refurbish on opening day in June — a grain of sand compared with the number of new shoes being produced on a given day. Yet if a wider culture of repair replaces the planned disposability of modern fashion, the way we buy and maintain goods would radically change.

Golden Goose was acquired by the Permira investment group in 2020 for €1.3 billion. Though venture capitalists often demand the quickest maximum revenue, precluding the sacrifices required by sustainability efforts, Mr. Campara insisted that he had the faith of investors after ramping up profits in his tenure as chief executive while introducing a host of sustainability-minded initiatives. “We’re here to create more long-term value, not just revenues,” he said. “You can’t sell if you don’t have any clients.”

The shop, beyond the workstations for cobblers and embroiderers, hosts bins for recycling of any brand of clothes and shoes, in partnership with ReCircled, and resells secondhand sneakers and leather jackets on behalf of clients. Additionally, Golden Goose recently announced a series of ambitious goals for sustainability and inclusivity as well as plans to start a shoemaking academy next year that will train a new generation of artisans.

This spring, the label introduced its most innovative sneaker model yet, the Yatay Model 1B, which uses a low-water-use leather alternative made from inedible vegetable sources, created in collaboration with the Italian material producer Coronet. “Italy has an advantage when it comes to sustainability,” he said. “The supply chain is here, so it’s easier to innovate together.”

Mr. Campara said that while “Made in Italy” has long indicated quality to the world, future shoppers will be looking for something more: “Made with responsibility,” he said, with another gratified wink.


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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #31 on: January 14, 2024, 06:26:58 AM »
NYT ARTICLE FROM 2022

MILAN — The kings of our casual-attire era, sneakers have long been landfill fodder of cheap fabrication. Golden Goose, a maverick footwear enterprise, would like to propose an alternative: handicraft and repair.

With its flagship in Milan’s upmarket Brera neighborhood newly expanded and redesigned to accommodate workshops for cobblers and embroiderers, the brand best known for introducing $500 artisan-made sneakers is now offering in-store bespoke repairs that can run over $100. But despite the high-end pricing, the model may serve as a blueprint for fashion companies looking to extend the lifetime of their products.

“Artisans are able to produce uniqueness with their hands,” Silvio Campara, Golden Goose’s chief executive, recently offered as an explanation of the sneakers’ eye-popping costs as he leaned on a workshop counter at the rear of his brand’s revamped boutique. “And artisanship creates affection.”

It also explains the business incentive to give artisans in their 20s and 30s a starring role at the flagship. In a well-outfitted atelier, a team of cobblers cleans, restitches and resoles shoes — especially sneakers — amid polishing wheels, leather-sewing machines and an ozone sanitizing closet, surrounded by the heady turpentine scent of glue on rubber. In another corner of the store, lined with drawers of rhinestones and rows of ribbon rolls, embroiderers sew patches on jeans and other clothing and stitch hearts, flowers and other whimsical designs onto sneakers — Golden Goose’s first venture into customization.

“Our goal is to renew the dignity of artisans,” Mr. Campara said, holding up a half-repaired sneaker with the nailheads of its hand-hammered insole exposed. “It was a difficult task to find 20 young people who wanted to work as cobblers today,” he added, but they were ultimately convinced that as part of Golden Goose’s repair program, “they’re shaping the future of fashion.”

“I’ll be thrilled if other brands try to copy us,” he said.

Buoyant and self-assured, Mr. Campara sported ripped white jeans spangled all over with pearls and rhinestones while showing off Golden Goose’s renovated flagship last month. He has a habit of winking when he’s bragging, as when he proclaimed, “We’re way ahead.” (Wink.) “Everyone else is outdated.”

The cobblers behind him, in denim jumpsuits with their official title — “Dream Maker” — patched in capitals across their back, removed sneakers from a specialized oven that heats the rubber so the foxing, the strip that wraps some sneaker styles, can be peeled away and replaced along with the outsole.

“Five years ago, sneaker repair didn’t exist,” said Alessandro Pastore, a cobbler who formerly led production for factories making shoes for brands including Louis Vuitton, Jimmy Choo and Christian Louboutin. “There isn’t a single luxury boutique that offers this kind of repair service.” He began hammering rubber into place on a stake-mounted sneaker. “We are the first, and we are unique, and it makes us feel truly important.” (At that, Mr. Campara high-fived him from across the counter.)

The brand, founded in 2000 by Francesca Rinaldo and Alessandro Gallo, applied an old-fashioned approach to manufacturing sneakers: Instead of vulcanizing a rubber sole to encase the shoe’s top portion — the customary quick fix for sneaker production in Asia — Golden Goose looked to the cordwainers of its home territory of Veneto, a region renowned for formal shoes handcrafted according to tradition, where several luxury fashion houses have established factories to take advantage of local footwear artisanship. Golden Goose devised sneakers with the same individually sewn uppers and hand-hammered soles found in formal shoes, and today it fabricates more than a million pairs of sneakers a year using traditional techniques in eight factories in Veneto and around Italy. “We’re the best,” Mr. Campara said with another wink, “because we’re Italian. We have the craftsmanship in this country that produces the world’s luxury goods.”

In the Milan boutique, window shelves display pairs of half-rehabbed sneakers. The befores and afters can be difficult to discern without studying the soles, however, as the sneakers themselves — in keeping with Golden Goose’s philosophy of “perfect imperfection” — proudly bear deliberate scuffs, tears, frays and inked-on graffiti. At the laundering station in the cobblers’ workshop, dozens of jars indicate the range of shades needed in white paint alone, from snow to smoggy, to match the effects of wear. A price board of artisan sneaker services advertises the apparently popular “Lived-In Treatment.” The cost: 70 euros, about the same in dollars.

The shop is an elegy to this timeworn aesthetic: Clothing collections inspired by varsity sports and Americana feature patches, holes and mended rips; Blondie, Duran Duran, INXS and other heroes of the 1980s play on the sound system; shelves are artfully arranged with roller skates, analog cameras, vinyl records and cassette tapes displayed in cases like pinned butterflies.

As physical boutiques struggle for significance in the age of online shopping, the new Golden Goose model is drawing visitors with its craft services, and the sneaker maker plans to open similar concept shops in New York and Dubai later this year. Though repairs are typically considered a loss for brands, Mr. Campara insists that the approach is good for business.

“Someone who feels taken care of will always return, and repairs help keep my products in your life and in your memory,” he explained. Customers spend time in the store, tell people about their experience and, he said candidly, often buy more sneakers when they come in to spruce up their previous pair.

As for the strategy’s sustainability merits, clients showed up with 38 pairs of sneakers to refurbish on opening day in June — a grain of sand compared with the number of new shoes being produced on a given day. Yet if a wider culture of repair replaces the planned disposability of modern fashion, the way we buy and maintain goods would radically change.

Golden Goose was acquired by the Permira investment group in 2020 for €1.3 billion. Though venture capitalists often demand the quickest maximum revenue, precluding the sacrifices required by sustainability efforts, Mr. Campara insisted that he had the faith of investors after ramping up profits in his tenure as chief executive while introducing a host of sustainability-minded initiatives. “We’re here to create more long-term value, not just revenues,” he said. “You can’t sell if you don’t have any clients.”

The shop, beyond the workstations for cobblers and embroiderers, hosts bins for recycling of any brand of clothes and shoes, in partnership with ReCircled, and resells secondhand sneakers and leather jackets on behalf of clients. Additionally, Golden Goose recently announced a series of ambitious goals for sustainability and inclusivity as well as plans to start a shoemaking academy next year that will train a new generation of artisans.

This spring, the label introduced its most innovative sneaker model yet, the Yatay Model 1B, which uses a low-water-use leather alternative made from inedible vegetable sources, created in collaboration with the Italian material producer Coronet. “Italy has an advantage when it comes to sustainability,” he said. “The supply chain is here, so it’s easier to innovate together.”

Mr. Campara said that while “Made in Italy” has long indicated quality to the world, future shoppers will be looking for something more: “Made with responsibility,” he said, with another gratified wink.

 i aint reading all that

happy for you

or sorry that happened
Expand Quote
This is shaping up to be Bunt of the Year
[close]
I hope you like home runs fucker

GAY

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #32 on: January 14, 2024, 07:10:26 AM »
There’s a lot of winking in that story. That lends the whole affair a predatory feel.

Giftedly Hater’d

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #33 on: January 14, 2024, 10:49:02 AM »
Expand Quote


 i aint reading all that

happy for you

or sorry that happened
[close]

It was the text of a paywalled article in the post before.  Trying to extend a courtesy to other people in a good natured conversation about some shit of little consequence. Read or don’t read it.  You seem like a smarmy fuck. Sorry that happened to you.

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #34 on: January 14, 2024, 11:03:12 AM »
Staring at this guy’s jeans. it struck me all of a sudden that I was watching a down-and-out man wearing a working/middle class man’s fast fashion version of a rich man’s high fashion stylized version of a poor man’s torn and tattered clothing.  The world is a strange place.

I can Derelicte my own balls, thank you very much.

Old SadFat

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #35 on: January 14, 2024, 03:17:47 PM »
There’s a lot of winking in that story. That lends the whole affair a predatory feel.

Why? What is about middle aged men in the Italian fashion industry giving you the winky eye that makes you feel uncomfortable? You need to relax more. Let Papa Luigi give you a back rub. 

Also their business model is artisanal trainers that cost a monkey, plus another hundred to repair maybe, but they're supposed to look busted anyway?  Fuck me man I am actually jealous I did not think of this.

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #36 on: January 14, 2024, 07:05:24 PM »
In the heart of Milan, an Italian man winks.

He shirks his responsibility for the day and winks. Not for the personal gain, accolades, or fame.

An Italian man winks with a deep sense of obligation, not just to his countrymen, but also to himself.

Three and a half years have transpired since that fateful night. The night that changed all of his priorities and how he viewed the world.

An Italian man in Milan winks to acknowledge the forgotten, the lost, and the marginalized.

An Italian man winks with the strength and stamina of 500 horses, horses that are hopped up on goofballs for that matter.

It is with the utmost respect and sincerity that I tell you...

An Italian man winks. 
« Last Edit: January 15, 2024, 01:16:09 AM by pugmaster »
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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #37 on: January 14, 2024, 09:11:20 PM »
In the heart of Milan, an Italian man winks.

He shirks his responsibility for the day and winks. Not for the personal gain, accolades, or fame.

An Italian man winks with a deep sense of obligation, not just to his countrymen, but also to himself.

Three and a half years have transpired since that fateful night. The night that changed all of his priorities and how he viewed the world.

An Italian man in Milan winks to acknowledge the forgotten, the lost, and the marginalized.

An Italian man winks with the strength and stamina of 500 horses, horses that are hopped up on goofballs for that matter.

It is with the upmost respect and sincerity that I tell you...

An Italian man winks.
Bravo, Sir.
Bravo!!!
I tell you THIS, my good man: there are not enough gnars in the universe to express my appreciation for this work.

I wanna play you in a game of SKATE for the right to continue talking shit on me.  You think you got me?

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #38 on: January 15, 2024, 12:00:02 PM »

Repeat: Flip NOT making Cory Juneau pro the second he transferred there from Creature is the biggest disrespect ever.

He deserves it not just because of talent, contest winnings, and olympic medal.
But because among transition contest skaters his style and trick selection is unique and so far above all other transition skaters except for Jimmy Wilkins.

It's a joke that Rune, Bob, Aarto get pro models and Cory doesn't.


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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #39 on: January 15, 2024, 12:10:13 PM »
Expand Quote
Expand Quote
First I thought this was a shoe trending among preppy white girls
[close]

It is
[close]

See also Veja, which are very popular here in London, and look more like skate shoes than most skate shoes.

Saw those things in shop windows everywhere in Paris and thought they were some weird European vans line at first. They did look pretty skateable
PINE 2009, 2010, 2011, 2020, PINE STILL MAKIN' MONEY.

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #40 on: January 15, 2024, 12:59:11 PM »
In the heart of Milan, an Italian man winks.

He shirks his responsibility for the day and winks. Not for the personal gain, accolades, or fame.

An Italian man winks with a deep sense of obligation, not just to his countrymen, but also to himself.

Three and a half years have transpired since that fateful night. The night that changed all of his priorities and how he viewed the world.

An Italian man in Milan winks to acknowledge the forgotten, the lost, and the marginalized.

An Italian man winks with the strength and stamina of 500 horses, horses that are hopped up on goofballs for that matter.

It is with the utmost respect and sincerity that I tell you...

An Italian man winks.

Commandatore! Bonjourno!

benboardbreaker

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #41 on: January 15, 2024, 01:45:20 PM »
what a weird choice of shoe sponsor. he has always been getting checks from non skate related brands. he was on big billboards here in copenhagen with BMW on the free way in to the city during the olympics for some months.

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #42 on: January 19, 2024, 02:34:23 AM »
happy for him but its just kindve funny that nobody will skate these shoes but him, and maybe evan mock

Badmeaningood

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #43 on: January 19, 2024, 04:00:27 AM »
Wasn't Cory outed as a racist pos? Maybe that's why they haven't given him the bump?

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #44 on: January 19, 2024, 04:32:24 AM »
My skate classic eras looks better than this shiet
:p

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #45 on: January 19, 2024, 03:15:24 PM »
It's pretty strange In recent years Rune has gotten a lot of shine in the Danish mainstream media. Back when he was good nobody outside of skateboarding knew of him. Even during the tony hawk play station era. Now he is on talk shows, TV apperances, ads, cover of fashion magazines etc. He is like the Danish Tony Hawk figure in our country now.

georgethecat

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #46 on: January 19, 2024, 03:31:54 PM »
Perhaps the dignity of artisans has been successfully renewed.

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Re: Rune Glifberg on golden goose shoes
« Reply #47 on: April 22, 2024, 04:04:22 PM »
Saw this today. These are reps (knock offs). Reminded me of this thread. I cant tell the difference and these are around $40-$50



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