Business World

Best foot forward: Indonesian makes shoes from chicken feet

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BANDUNG, Indonesia — It sounds like a riddle — what feet can be used to make shoes to put on your feet?

Nurman Farieka Ramdhany, a 25-year-old entreprene­ur in the Indonesian city of Bandung, thinks he has come up with a cost-effective answer that promotes sustainabi­lity: skin taken from the feet of chickens.

A rubbery delicacy in many cuisines, including dim sum, chicken feet are covered with skin that has a similar texture and pattern to snake or crocodile skin.

Ramdhany’s father had researched these more exotic skins and recommende­d he try making shoes with chicken feet, which he started doing in 2017.

Now, Ramdhany and a team of five, including his father, produce shoes entirely or partially made from chicken feet in a labor-intensive operation that takes 10 days. They skin the feet by hand, dye the skins and sew them into pieces that can be fashioned into shoes.

It takes 45 chicken feet to make a pair of shoes, which are priced between $35 and $140.

Ramdhany said he is mainly motivated by the opportunit­y to use a waste product from fast food restaurant­s and markets, his main suppliers.

“The waste is a lot, that is why we try to process it to get more value from it,” he said.

Food waste is forecast to rise by almost a third to more than 2 billion tons by 2030, the Boston Consulting Group forecast in 2018.

Ramdhany says customers like his shoes. “They say our products are comfortabl­e to wear. So far the market response has been positive.”

 ?? PHOTOS FROM REUTERS ?? NURMAN Farieka Ramdhani, the 25-year-old craftsman behind the brand, arranges shoe boxes at the workshop.
PHOTOS FROM REUTERS NURMAN Farieka Ramdhani, the 25-year-old craftsman behind the brand, arranges shoe boxes at the workshop.
 ??  ?? HIRKA SHOES use skin from chicken feet, seen here laid out during the drying process after being dyed at their workshop in Bandung, West Java Province.
HIRKA SHOES use skin from chicken feet, seen here laid out during the drying process after being dyed at their workshop in Bandung, West Java Province.
 ??  ?? THE finished Hirka shoes on display at the company’s workhop.
THE finished Hirka shoes on display at the company’s workhop.
 ??  ?? A WORKER prepares a patter for a shoe using the chicken leather.
A WORKER prepares a patter for a shoe using the chicken leather.
 ??  ?? A WORKER prepares the upper part of a shoe.
A WORKER prepares the upper part of a shoe.

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