Paraboot "YOSEMITE (FEMME)"
Regular price
$363.00
Unit price
per
YOSEMITE" (Yosemite), the famous climbing boot.
The laces run from the ankle to near the toe for a snug fit. The rubber guard protects the toe and heel, which are easily damaged, and features details specific to climbing boots.
The sole uses Jeanne sole, an original Paraboot rubber sole also used in the "AVORIAZ" trekking boot masterpiece, and has abundant cushioning and durability.
The Mackay manufacturing method promises a light footing with a familiar fit and flexibility.
The combination of suede leather and rubber with good coloring is eye-catching and casual as town shoes, while the minimalist all-black coloring has a modern atmosphere while retaining its strong roots as a mountaineering shoe.
Paraboot - YOSEMITE
YOSEMITE F
COL: FOUL NOIR
MATERIAL: Cowhide upper / Rubber sole
SOLE: JANNU SOLE
SIZE:UK5.5(25.0)
MADE IN SPAIN
-Paraboot
Paraboot was founded in 1927 by Remy Richard Ponvert, a shoemaker from the Voirons region of France, after he acquired a pair of rubber-covered boots in the United States, where he was staying.
Inspired by the rubber boots, he came up with the idea of using natural latex, which was directly imported from the Brazilian port of Pará, for the sole material of his shoes.
He named his own brand "PARABOOT," after the port from which it was exported.
He developed a unique rubber synthesis method using para rubber as the raw material and obtained a patent for it.
Thus, the world's only shoe manufacturer that produces its own rubber soles is born.
With their original rubber soles, which were robust, abrasion-resistant, and comfortable to wear, Paraboot shoes were favored by general laborers, firefighters, mail carriers, and military personnel, and were accepted as work shoes by the world.
They also gained status as outdoor shoes when they were used by adventurers such as Arctic explorer Paul Emile Victor.
The Norwegian Welt method, which allows the shoes to be worn in all weather conditions, became Paraboot's specialty, and along with rubber soles, became a symbolic technique of the brand.
The Norwegian welt method was originally developed for mountaineering shoes.
This method requires about 150 steps and makes shoes more robust than the Goodyear welt method.
Currently, the company owns factories in Izaud and Huret, France, and about 70 people at these two factories produce shoes with rubber soles and Norveigian or Goodyear welted soles.
The "dress line" using French Dupuis box calf, etc., which started in the spring/summer of 2005, deck shoes made by the Causses Braque method, driving shoes, sandals and slip-ons made by the Vulcanize method, etc., are all produced. In total, 350,000 pairs of shoes are produced in a year.
In terms of quality and quantity, it is no exaggeration to say that Paraboot is the symbolic brand of French shoes.
The laces run from the ankle to near the toe for a snug fit. The rubber guard protects the toe and heel, which are easily damaged, and features details specific to climbing boots.
The sole uses Jeanne sole, an original Paraboot rubber sole also used in the "AVORIAZ" trekking boot masterpiece, and has abundant cushioning and durability.
The Mackay manufacturing method promises a light footing with a familiar fit and flexibility.
The combination of suede leather and rubber with good coloring is eye-catching and casual as town shoes, while the minimalist all-black coloring has a modern atmosphere while retaining its strong roots as a mountaineering shoe.
Paraboot - YOSEMITE
YOSEMITE F
COL: FOUL NOIR
MATERIAL: Cowhide upper / Rubber sole
SOLE: JANNU SOLE
SIZE:UK5.5(25.0)
MADE IN SPAIN
-Paraboot
Paraboot was founded in 1927 by Remy Richard Ponvert, a shoemaker from the Voirons region of France, after he acquired a pair of rubber-covered boots in the United States, where he was staying.
Inspired by the rubber boots, he came up with the idea of using natural latex, which was directly imported from the Brazilian port of Pará, for the sole material of his shoes.
He named his own brand "PARABOOT," after the port from which it was exported.
He developed a unique rubber synthesis method using para rubber as the raw material and obtained a patent for it.
Thus, the world's only shoe manufacturer that produces its own rubber soles is born.
With their original rubber soles, which were robust, abrasion-resistant, and comfortable to wear, Paraboot shoes were favored by general laborers, firefighters, mail carriers, and military personnel, and were accepted as work shoes by the world.
They also gained status as outdoor shoes when they were used by adventurers such as Arctic explorer Paul Emile Victor.
The Norwegian Welt method, which allows the shoes to be worn in all weather conditions, became Paraboot's specialty, and along with rubber soles, became a symbolic technique of the brand.
The Norwegian welt method was originally developed for mountaineering shoes.
This method requires about 150 steps and makes shoes more robust than the Goodyear welt method.
Currently, the company owns factories in Izaud and Huret, France, and about 70 people at these two factories produce shoes with rubber soles and Norveigian or Goodyear welted soles.
The "dress line" using French Dupuis box calf, etc., which started in the spring/summer of 2005, deck shoes made by the Causses Braque method, driving shoes, sandals and slip-ons made by the Vulcanize method, etc., are all produced. In total, 350,000 pairs of shoes are produced in a year.
In terms of quality and quantity, it is no exaggeration to say that Paraboot is the symbolic brand of French shoes.