Skip to main content

Salomon wants to make you shoes that are unique to your feet

The ME:sh custom shoe program from Salomon launches this fall

Fitted to any athletes - S/LAB ME:sh: From Lucy to Kilian
Treat your body — or at least your feet — like a temple. Worship, of course, requires special care and attention, and that’s precisely what a new line of shoes from Salomon wants to do. Meet the new ME:sh line from Salomon’s in-house incubator S/Lab. It’s a fully customizable shoe that promises to be unique to each customer.

We first told you about the line in May, but four months later, we’re now closer to the launch of the ME:sh program in earnest. “A foot is like a fingerprint,” Jean-Yves Couput, innovation director at Salomon, told Outside Online. “It’s unique to the individual.”

As such, there’s nothing off the shelf about the shoes emerging from this product line. To the contrary, each and every piece of footwear from ME;sh is designed for one person and one person alone. Initially, that person was meant to be professional ski mountaineer and distance runner Kilian Jornet, who requested the first specially designed pair of Salomon shoes. But now, almost a decade later, Salomon is saying that you don’t have to be a professional athlete to warrant your own custom-built pair of shoes.

Literally everything about a ME:sh custom runner is exactly that — custom. According to S/Lab, anatomical biomechanics, usage analysis, and aesthetic preferences are all taken into account in designing your shoe. Indeed, you’ll play a part in the design yourself — S/Lab promises digital co-creation that merges Salomon’s “DNA and expertise with needs and preferences of the consumer.”

The upper portion of the shoe is constructed using a 3D-knit technique, while the lower part is determined by the wearer’s drop, cushioning, and outsole specifications.

So how much will a truly unique pair of runners cost you? Around $327, but that’s not the most difficult part. As it stands, you have to actually visit Salomon in order to get your perfect fit, which means that you’ll either have to trek to one of the company’s eight locations in France or the one in Belgium in order to even have the opportunity to drop this kind of cash.

However, if you’re willing to accept a slightly less customized experience, you can also check out the location-specific Unique to Community models, or one of the two Kilian Jornet models.

While the program is currently focused on shoes, Couput notes that there’s potential for further customization in other products as well. Indeed, we may soon see customized jackets and backpacks, not only from Salomon, but from other companies as well. “It’s great to be the first mover,” Couput said. “But the first mover doesn’t always win the race.”

Update: Salomon is looking to launch ME:sh in the fall.

Editors' Recommendations

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Andrew Yang’s Data Dividend Project wants you to get paid for your data
Andrew Yang

Former presidential candidate Andrew Yang wants everyone to get paid when companies use their personal data. 

Yang appeared on Digital Trends Live on Thursday to talk about the Data Dividend Project, which he recently founded to encourage people to take control of their online data. 

Read more
Disney is making new Frozen animated shorts for your kids to watch on YouTube
disney frozen shorts youtube josh gad olaf fun with snow

"Fun With Snow" l At Home With Olaf

While society shelters in place amid the coronavirus outbreak, the team over at Disney has gone to considerable lengths to make sure children can stay entertained at home. It began with the early release of Frozen 2 on Disney+, and now Disney has announced that it’s doubling down on Frozen shorts.

Read more
Startup partnering with Dennis Quaid wants to make podcasts like a ‘movie for your ears’
Dennis Quaid

Actor Dennis Quaid may be synonymous with Hollywood classics like The Rookie, Wyatt Earp, and The Right Stuff, but the star is branching out by partnering with a new podcast-based media startup called Audio Up. It features his own interview show, The Dennissance, and aims to take the world of podcast "from black and white into technicolor."

“I had barely listened to a podcast before,” Quaid said to Digital Trends Live. but after famed record producer T Bone Burnett introduced him to Audio Up partner Jared Gutstadt, he quickly became a fan of the medium.

Read more