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The Straw Sandals Project

Welcome to The Straw Sandals Project site!

An International Archive of Straw Sandals

Dedicated to the collection, preservation and study of plant fiber woven footwear in human migration, settlement and civilization.

In 2002, I realized the trip of a lifetime when my travel companions and I visited the ancient Silk Road city of Kashgar in Xinjiang Province, P.R. China. I saw with my own eyes and through my camera lens the extraordinary human diversity present at one of the great crossroads of early human migrations, Central Asia. I cannot forget walking down the dusty streets of this oasis town and seeing Mediterranean faces that would have been unremarkable among the street faces in Athens and Rome! These were mixed with the faces of Han Chinese, Mongolians, Kazaks, Kyrgyz, Tajiks and Uighurs. Traveling outside of Kashgar, I saw the hostile terrain of the early migration routes, passes through the high Pamirs, the Tibetan Plateau and the forbidding and lethal lobe of the Gobi Desert known as the Taklamakan Desert. How did humans survive those extraordinary treks?

Several years later, I created an honors section of an undergraduate course, Gene Expression, which I taught at the University of Connecticut. About a half dozen mostly senior honors students and I met during lunch once a week to discuss readings in a selected book. The first book we discussed was “The Journey of Man” by Spencer Wells, and the second year we read “DNA, the secret of life” by James D. Watson. These choices were prompted by my growing interest in the genetics of human migrations. Our discussions were broad-ranging and exciting.

Then, my colleague Helen Neumann and I incorporated the topic of early human migrations into a writing course for Molecular and Cell Biology majors. Discussions of the genetic evidence for early migrations along with the inferred geographic routes prompted a fundamental question. What did they wear on their feet that allowed humans to cross terrain like I saw in western China? Could the answer be as simple as straw sandals? This is how my interest in woven shoes and sandals all started. The end is not in sight! In time I hope to “weave” the strands of science, art, geography and history together that currently exist on this web site mostly as isolated threads. First and foremost, this site is a celebration of an ancient handcraft born of necessity that has emerged in modern times as a successful, earth-friendly cottage industry.

Larry Hightower
Curator, The Straw Sandals Project

Featured Friend of the Straw Sandals Project

Ruixing Lu

RixingLuFace

Wuxi Chinese Blue Calico Museum is the first privately owned museum in Wuxi. It was built by a successful businessman Ruixing Lu. He has spent over ten years to set it up. It is about 17000 square meters in size. He collected thousands of valuable blue calico handcrafts from the Qing Dynasty to the 1960′s …Read More

Straw Sandals Project News
  • 4.3.2012
    Straw Sandals On-line Catalog Nears Launch.

    It has been a while since my last post but things are happening!  In collaboration with my old friend and colleague Barry Hall, we have been busy constructing an on-line catalog of hand-crafted footwear.  I will be posting more about this catalog in the coming days but simply stated, this catalog will allow anyone interested …Read More

  • 10.13.2011
    Aztec Art in Japan.

    Occasionally I search Ebay and Etsy for straw shoes and sandals.  Recently I found a store named AztecArt on Etsy that offered a pair of straw sandals that looked very interesting.  The overall design was unlike any I had seen from Japan and yet the soles were very similar to sandals from Japan in The …Read More

  • 10.3.2011
    Contemporary designers may help save an ancient craft.

    A new direction for the Straw Sandals Project is the collection of representative contemporary shoes and sandals that use woven components.  This is happening in both lower and high-end brands.  Our first contemporary entry into the collection is C25, a pair of high heel raffia-covered sandals made in China by Rocket Dog.  Shoes by this …Read More

  • 9.23.2011
    A Carved Wood and Rafia Shoe made in the Philippines.

    It is always fun to welcome a shoe from a different country to the Collection.  I found these in the Etsy on-line store Hillbillyfilly.  They were described as “Vintage 40s WWII exotic carved wooden platform dragon peep toe ankle strap high heel shoes.”  All true!  To expand a bit on this description, shoes like these …Read More

  • 5.1.2011
    Curator Lu visits The Collection.

    This past week (4/28/2011), I welcomed Ruixing Lu, Founding Curator of the Wuxi Chinese Blue Calico Museum, along with his wife Xiaoxuan Ji.  His daughter Lu Qi, who is studying financial mathematics, arranged our meeting at the University of Connecticut.  Curator Lu has contributed many of the shoes and sandals from Japan and China.  He …Read More