Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

MIT's experimental 3D printed shoe can snap into custom shapes and designs

Add as a preferred source on Google

A handful of sports brands have started 3D printing sneakers, but MIT’s Self-Assembly Lab is already taking the idea a step further. By using a newly-developed textile technology, the group has developed the Minimal Shoe: a sneaker that’s custom printed for every wearer’s unique pair of feet. The process behind the Minimal Shoe is key, since it allows designers to stretch and print materials into a flat textile that snaps into any custom shape when cut loose from its frame.

The idea for the Minimal Shoe came about when the Self-Assembly Lab team was invited to design a unique footwear technology display for the London Design Museum’s “Life on Foot” exhibition. “Imagine using active materials to produce one-size-fits-all shoes, adaptive fit, and self-forming manufacturing processes. This technique would radically transform the production of footwear forever,” the group said in a statement. The Self-Assembly Lab has high hopes for the still developing technology. The 3D printing process behind the form of the Minimal Shoe is just one example of the ways that “active” materials simplify complicated design procedures. Research into these kinds of programmable materials could also be applied to furniture design, product manufacturing, and shipping.

Recommended Videos

To create the Minimal Shoe, hard lines of plastic are 3D printed onto a stretched textile canvas. Since each line represents a different part of the shoe, different lines are printed with varying levels of thickness and flexibility. As soon as the textile is cut free from the original canvas-style stretching, the placement of the 3D printed lines causes the textile to snap to whatever shape has been arranged in the custom shoe design. The precision of this 3D printing process would allow manufacturers to specify fit and form to any individual wearer, while the flexibility of the stretchy textile that makes up the shoe itself would allow for a more generic shoe that’s form-fitting enough to conform to a wide variety of foot shapes.

Self-Assembly Lab researchers say they are open to both of these application-focused possibilities, and have announced that their developments with this kind of “active” textile technology have earned the attention of an unidentified “large sportswear company”. Big names like Nike and Adidas have already announced their plans for widespread 3D-printed sneaker manufacturing, so the playing field is narrowing as competition sparks the race for innovation.

Chloe Olewitz
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chloe is a writer from New York with a passion for technology, travel, and playing devil's advocate. You can find out more…
Study finds humans will talk to AI ghosts of the dead as reincarnations, and it’s pretty grim
The first AI ghost study is in. The results are about as complicated as you'd expect.
VR Headset, Person, Face

A new study from the University of Colorado Boulder confirms something that sounds both impressive and concerning. People find interacting with AI simulations of their dead loved ones deeply meaningful, and most will come away wanting to do it again.

The researchers call it a "generative ghost," which is a clear reference to generative AI, but I’d still prefer to call it unsettling.

Read more
China’s UBTech unveils eerily lifelike companion robots, and yes, they want to move in with you
UBTech's new humanoid robots are built for companionship, using emotion-aware AI, long-term memory, and humanlike expressions to become part of your everyday life.
UBTech Uworld U1 series robot launch

A humanoid robot designed to live in your house, learn your habits, and pick up on your mood without being prompted is no longer science fiction. Shenzhen-based UBTech Robotics unveiled its Uworld U1 series this week, introducing three robots built for companionship rather than factory work or household chores.

A body that moves like yours, and a brain that reads how you feel

Read more
This $249 LED sign wants to fix your work-life balance
My productivity isn't worth $249... or is it?
Flipper Busy Bar

Flipper Devices has built a reputation among hackers and hardware enthusiasts with the Flipper Zero, a pocket-sized gadget capable of interacting with RFID, NFC, Bluetooth, and other wireless protocols. Now, the London-based company is taking a very different approach.

Its latest product, the Busy Bar, is a desktop productivity display designed to help users stay focused, signal their availability, and automate parts of their workflow. After being teased last year, the device is finally going on sale on July 14. While the concept is genuinely clever, its starting price of up to $249 may make many buyers think twice.

Read more