The Derby
Open-laced, full-grain calf. The one that sells first.
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Gaziantep · Family atelier
Full-grain leather dress shoes, made by hand in a family atelier — for the boutiques that still care how a shoe is built.
1 Shoe · 5 Steps by Hand
No factory line. Scroll, and follow a Lurawear shoe through every step on the bench — cut, lasted, welted, soled, finished.
↓ scroll
STEP 01 / CLICKING
Each panel is cut by hand from full-grain calf — by eye, around the marks and grain of the leather.
STEP 02 / LASTING
The upper is pulled and tacked over a wooden last, where the shoe takes its real form.
STEP 03 / WELTING
A welt is sewn around the base — the seam that lets the shoe be resoled instead of thrown away.
STEP 04 / SOLING
Leather sole and heel are set and hammered down, then trimmed flush to the welt.
STEP 05 / FINISHING
Eyelets set, laces threaded, edges burnished and the leather brought to a deep shine. One pair, done.
The line
A tight range of classics, each in a small run of colours. Wholesale pricing and the full line sheet on request.
Open-laced, full-grain calf. The one that sells first.
Closed-laced, for when the shoe has to be the formal one.
Single buckle, antique brass. Quietly the favourite.
Hand-stitched apron, unlined for the warmer months.
Leather boot, elastic gore, Blake-stitched sole.
Hand-punched broguing on a rounded country last.
For retailers
We're taking on a small number of boutique partners for the coming season. Low minimums, simple terms, and a line that's made to sit on a shelf and move.