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Nike Made a Hands-Free Shoe For Arthritic, Disabled and Pregnant People to Easily Slip Into

Nike Made a Hands-Free Shoe For Arthritic, Disabled and Pregnant People to Easily Slip Into
The Flyease Go: Nike roll out the first hands-free shoe to be available for around $120, and is perfect for arthritis or stroke patients

As many times as Nike has revolutionized the shoe, their latest groundbreaker is an option designed not for elite athletes, but to answer a specific need that has gone largely unaddressed.

Called the Flyease Go, it is the first totally hands-free shoe, enveloping and releasing your feet solely through natural motion—a bit like Tony Stark putting on his Iron Man suit.

The revolutionary shoe is perfect, says a top Nike designer, for pregnant women in their third trimester, arthritis patients, or those who have lost some or all of the use of their arms—such as stroke victims or injured military veterans.

In a chipper article on Fast Company, Nike designer Tobie Hatfield recounted the story of how in 2008, the world's largest athletic shoe and sportswear company received the unfortunate news that their very first employee had suffered a stroke and could no longer use one of his arms.

Hatfield was put in charge of designing a special shoe to accommodate one of their most treasured staff members, and came up with one involving a zipper and Velcro.

Now the genesis of that idea has led to the creation of the Flyease Go, an "everyday performance lifestyle shoe," that is totally hands-free, and will be released in a slow rollout this year starting at $120.

Divided in two halves restrained by a neoprene tension band, but with a limited, two-stage hinge in the middle of the outsole, the slipper or loafer-like front portion of the shoe arches up to a 30-degree angle as the hinge opens when the shoe is not being worn.

The heel bends the same, but in the opposite direction, and when the foot is inserted into the loafer-like front, a simple pressing motion closes the hinge, refastening the neoprene band and pulling the two halves together snug around your feet.

In the past, Nike has drawn inspiration from the titans of human athleticism—Mohammed Salah, LeBron James and the like—but here they've taken inspiration from one of the most iconic and universal biomechanic motions of our species.

The back heel of the shoe has a hard plastic shell, terminating in a small ledge, called "the kickstand heel," which is the hands-free mechanism for opening the hinge, and is based on the motion we all do with our sneakers when we don't feel like untying the laces.

You know the one we mean, when you press down on the back of the heel with one foot in order to pull your foot out of the shoe.

"What I love about this shoe in particular is we listened to the extreme needs of [people with specific limitations]," Sarah Reinertsen, the Senior Director of Nike Ease, tells Fast Company. "But with this solution we feel like it's a universal proposition."

Called the Flyease Go, it is the first totally hands-free shoe, enveloping and releasing your feet solely through natural motion—a bit like Tony Stark putting on his Iron Man suit.

The revolutionary shoe is perfect, says a top Nike designer, for pregnant women in their third trimester, arthritis patients, or those who have lost some or all of the use of their arms—such as stroke victims or injured military veterans.

In a chipper article on Fast Company, Nike designer Tobie Hatfield recounted the story of how in 2008, the world's largest athletic shoe and sportswear company received the unfortunate news that their very first employee had suffered a stroke and could no longer use one of his arms.

Hatfield was put in charge of designing a special shoe to accommodate one of their most treasured staff members, and came up with one involving a zipper and Velcro.

Now the genesis of that idea has led to the creation of the Flyease Go, an "everyday performance lifestyle shoe," that is totally hands-free, and will be released in a slow rollout this year starting at $120.

Divided in two halves restrained by a neoprene tension band, but with a limited, two-stage hinge in the middle of the outsole, the slipper or loafer-like front portion of the shoe arches up to a 30-degree angle as the hinge opens when the shoe is not being worn.

The heel bends the same, but in the opposite direction, and when the foot is inserted into the loafer-like front, a simple pressing motion closes the hinge, refastening the neoprene band and pulling the two halves together snug around your feet.

In the past, Nike has drawn inspiration from the titans of human athleticism—Mohammed Salah, LeBron James and the like—but here they've taken inspiration from one of the most iconic and universal biomechanic motions of our species.

The back heel of the shoe has a hard plastic shell, terminating in a small ledge, called "the kickstand heel," which is the hands-free mechanism for opening the hinge, and is based on the motion we all do with our sneakers when we don't feel like untying the laces.

You know the one we mean, when you press down on the back of the heel with one foot in order to pull your foot out of the shoe.

"What I love about this shoe in particular is we listened to the extreme needs of [people with specific limitations]," Sarah Reinertsen, the Senior Director of Nike Ease, tells Fast Company. "But with this solution we feel like it's a universal proposition."

"We talk a lot about universal design and what universal design does when it creates an invitation for every and any athlete," said Chief Design Officer John Hoke also. "And when we solve that problem really, really, well—like I think the Nike Go does—it creates universal appeal. It's not going to be bound by one unique audience. It welcomes any audience because it's so clever."

(WATCH the Nike video below to go ‘behind the design.')

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