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Kigo Star shoes: Eco-friendly, foldable footwear for women on the go

Posted by Siel in de-car-ing, environment, fashion (Monday November 23, 2009 at 2:27 pm)

Kigo Star shoes

Working women who’d like to walk to the office: Now comes a pair of eco-friendly, comfy shoes that will let you avoid that funny pencil-skirt-with-tennis-shoes look! Kigo Star shoes are lightweight footwear that look as cute with an office suit as they do with weekend jeans.

Marketed as “completely portable footwear,” these Mary Jane style shoes have uppers made with recycled PET from used plastic bottles and a rubber outsole. The flexible shoes are bendy — and are actually made to fold in half to wallet-size via a little decorative strip-with-hole and the heel and an elfin pointy hook at the toe.

4129289724 548acbc81d m Kigo Star shoes: Eco friendly, foldable footwear for women on the goI tried out Kigo Stars for a walk-and-bus combo trip down to Loyola Marymount University for a panel I was on last week. The trip was a perfect Kigo Star tryout journey, since I had to first walk 8 blocks to Lincoln (that distance is just too short that I’d feel silly waiting for a bus), where I caught the Big Blue Bus 3 to take to me the gate of LMU. I put on the Kigo Stars (right), packed my heels, and took a very comfortable walk to the bus stop.

Unfortunately, everything that could possibly go wrong with the bus went wrong (Don’t take this as a sign you shouldn’t take the bus! Usually, the 3’s quite reliable). The first went by without stopping (I reported this to BBB, so hopefully it won’t happen to you). The second stopped, but was super crowded due to the delinquent first bus — which meant the bus took a long time at each stop. To top it off, the wheelchair ramp was broken on this bus — which meant that to get a wheelchair-riding passenger on, the driver had to park the bus, manually heave the ramp down, help the passenger on, then manually heave the ramp back up. The driver was kind and jovial about the whole ordeal, but the task wasn’t easy (the ramp really, really didn’t want to move), and the ride was super slow.

But at least my feet were comfy! Also I enjoyed seeing what my fellow bus riders were wearing. I arrived at LMU a few minutes late and sprinted into the classroom — definitely not something I could have done in heels. However, I ended up never putting on the heels I’d carefully packed because I didn’t have time to change shoes. Luckily, the panel was about blogging — and the panelist before me talked about blogging his life — which let me start my bit by talking about how I was late because I was trying out Kigos for a future blog post.

In any case, Kigo Stars get high marks from me for cuteness and their comfortable, lightweight, barefoot feel. If you haven’t been willing to walk to work (or to the bus stop) because you didn’t want to sacrifice style, Kigo Stars could very well get you out of the car and put some spring in your step.

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The one feature I just don’t see myself using, however, is the shoes’ foldability, mainly because the shoes basically take up about the same amount of space whether folded or unfolded — though certainly the shape of the space taken up changes a bit. The foldability’s a unique and interesting feature — but not really a useful one for me. Because the shoes are so light and squishable, they’re easily portable, folded or not.

4129289928 ff5cb525dc Kigo Star shoes: Eco friendly, foldable footwear for women on the go

I was also a bit puzzled by the biodegradable shoe bag that the Kigo Stars come with — mainly because I had an extremely difficult time actually even getting the shoes into the teensy bag. Plus, if Kigo Stars are made for walking to work before changing into dressier shoes, the bag really needs to be big enough to contain the dressier shoes you’ll be carrying into work. As you can see, my size 6.5 basic black heels were way too big for the bag.

4129289666 264bc258eb Kigo Star shoes: Eco friendly, foldable footwear for women on the go

According to Rachelle Kuramoto, director of marketing for Kigo Shoes, the bags are made small on purpose so that the shoes fit in snugly without falling out. But she added that Kigo’s eager to get feedback like mine about the shoes and bag — and that the company’s also planning to make a bigger shoe bag available soon.

The main downside of the Kigo Stars is that they’re made in China. But working girls will be happy to know that Kigo Footwear is run by a trio of women — Jan Kuramoto, president and CEO; Kristin Parker, director of business development, and Rachelle. That said, boys too can enjoy Kigos! The Kigo Shel — made with similar materials but with a girlish design — are available in both men and women’s sizes.

Both Kigo Stars and Shels come in a variety of colors and cost $49.99 a pair at the Kigo Footwear online store.

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6 Comments

6 comments for Kigo Star shoes: Eco-friendly, foldable footwear for women on the go »

  1. You had me at barefoot – I’m not fond of wearing shoes, period. I think they would be great, especially for travel because you can dress them up or down. I’m definitely looking into these.

    Comment by Condo Blues — November 23, 2009 @ 6:53 pm

  2. I have some and they are attached to my feet. They are the only shoes I can wear in the rain bc they are water resistant! If they get soaked you can rest assured theyll be dry in 15 minutes! I walk everywhere and kigos has made this a much better experience for my feet….especially if Im going out on a night out on the town, whereas before Id have to wear some form of uncomfortable highheel, and walk a mile or so, but now I can just slide on my kigos and be out the door! If you haven’t gotten a pair yet you’re totally missin out!

    Comment by Lizz Martin — November 24, 2009 @ 6:43 am

  3. I’m intrigued by these!
    I take the 3 everyday and I wouldn’t trade my commute for anything. It’s usually really reliable and there is great people watching. I can read instead of focus on traffic. And when I have days like yours where everything goes wrong and I get delayed, I just remind myself that I don’t have to spend 15 – 30 minutes looking for a parking space every single time I go somewhere.

    Comment by Rachel (heart of light) — November 24, 2009 @ 12:16 pm

  4. For Condo and Rachel — Another reader, Brad, emailed letting me know he just bought a couple pairs as a gift after reading this post — and after searching out a coupon code — gokigo20 — that gave him 20% off until Thanksgiving. Just in case you want to take the splurge :)

    Comment by Siel — November 24, 2009 @ 5:26 pm

  5. These shoes look thin-soled and not suitable for a lot of walking. Wouldn’t it make more sense to invest in a sturdy but fashionable pair of shoes that could cover both needs? This is a necessity for me since I live in nyc. There are many cute shoes out there now that you can actually walk in and hold up well.

    Comment by mollie — December 4, 2009 @ 10:33 pm

  6. They hold up well for me — I wear them now to walk to the library (about 10 blocks each way). It really has to do, I think, with one’s shoe preference. Some people like thinner soled shoes that let them feel the ground; others not so much.

    Comment by Siel — December 8, 2009 @ 8:47 pm

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