These Shoes Were Made from ... 3-D Printing
Business + Economy

These Shoes Were Made from ... 3-D Printing

Flickr/John M. Jarvis

Could shopping for shoes possibly become a thing of the past? Perhaps, if more consumers start choosing to get their footwear 3-D printed.

Feetz, a San Diego start-up, is working to make it possible for people to buy customized footwear by printing shoes based on their specifications.

Related:  Will 3-D Printing Push Past the Hobbyist Market?

The plan is for a customer to snap three pictures of each foot from different angles and send the images to Feetz. The company would enter the images into specialized software that would allow a shoe for each foot to be printed. The customer would receive the shoes in seven days.

Shoemaking is perfect for the technology because printing shoes allows for extreme customization, according to Lucy Beard, the founder and CEO of Feetz.

"So many people have problems because one foot is bigger than the other or the shoes just don't fit right," she said at the Inside 3-D Printing Conference in New York. "But if you print a shoe just for that foot, it's going to be so comfortable, you're not going to want to take it off."

Related:  3-D Printing Gets Boost from Obama

Beard said her short-term target consumers are those with orthopedic problems, who would benefit the most from customized shoes.

"I want to solve that need and that pain for those people," she said. "Three-D-printing shoes for them is really a simple solution that could solve a lot of their problems."

In the consumer market, 3-D printing has mostly been used to create small objects: trinkets, phone cases and jewelry. But as printers become capable of using more materials, she said, the machines can print a wider variety of products.

The technology has already started to be adopted by some in the shoe industry, according to Beard.

Nike uses a 3-D system to create the cleat for its Flyknit shoes, introduced early last year. Adidas has used it, too, and a few smaller companies are printing parts of shoes.

But to print a whole shoe is a different ballgame, Beard said. "There's a lot of progress in the industry, but it's still early on," she said. "There are more materials to print with, but we're still limited."

Beard expects Feetz to begin taking orders by year-end. Material will be limited to a rubber-like substance at first, she said, but within the next two years she expects more options, which will enable her to offer more designs.

This article originally appeared at CNBC.

Read more at CNBC:
3-D printing is next computing revolution: Beltway Insider 
3-D printers and the cool stuff they make
How this $99 3-D-printed drone could change the toy industry

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