We named them Bricks.
Because everything else is.
Zero drop. Carbon grounding sole. Timeless design.
Drop 01 — The GAT — coming soon.
First 500 get early access — 48 remaining
No spam. One email when we launch.
452 / 500 spots claimed
We named them Bricks.
Because everything else is.
Zero drop. Carbon grounding sole. Timeless design.
Drop 01 — The GAT — coming soon.
First 500 get early access — 48 remaining
No spam. One email when we launch.
452 / 500 spots claimed
Every Brick shoe has an identical heel and forefoot height. Zero millimetres of difference. This is how your foot was designed to meet the ground.
A raised heel tilts your entire body forward. To compensate, your lower back arches, your hips tilt, your knees absorb stress they were never designed to take. Do this for years and the effects compound. Most people have no idea their shoes are doing this — because every shoe does it.
Zero drop restores the geometry your body expects. Your heel and your forefoot meet the ground at the same height. Your skeleton stacks the way it was designed to. The transition takes a few weeks. The results last a lifetime.
Every surface you've walked on in shoes has been an insulator. Your feet haven't touched the actual earth in years. Brick's carbon rubber outsole changes that.
Sole Resistivity Comparison
Lower resistance = better grounding. Brick is the only fashion shoe that achieves this.
Grounding — also called earthing — is the practice of direct skin contact with the earth's surface. The earth carries a mild negative electrical charge. When you make contact with it, free electrons transfer into your body, neutralising positively charged free radicals.
Every modern rubber and foam sole blocks this completely. Brick's carbon-filled natural rubber outsole conducts electricity at under 100kΩ — enough to allow that electron exchange to happen freely. You get the grounding benefit without ever taking your shoes off.
Most shoes are built on a last shaped like a fashion ideal — not a foot. Brick lasts are built around the actual width and shape of a natural human foot.
The human foot has 26 bones, 33 joints, and over 100 muscles, tendons, and ligaments. Narrow toe boxes force these structures into positions they were never designed for. Over years this deforms the foot, weakens the intrinsic muscles, and contributes to conditions like bunions, hammertoes, and plantar fasciitis.
Brick lasts are drawn from the outline of a natural, unshod foot. The widest point of the shoe matches the widest point of your foot. Your toes can spread, grip, and function the way they were designed to — even inside the shoe.
The barefoot shoe industry solved the health problem and created an aesthetic one. Brick solves both. Classic silhouettes. No compromises.
The barefoot shoe category has an aesthetic problem. Every existing brand signals health, sport, or wellness through its design. The shoes look like something you'd wear to a physiotherapy appointment — not to dinner, a meeting, or anywhere you actually care about how you look.
Brick draws from the most enduring silhouettes in footwear history. The German Army Trainer. The penny loafer. The Chelsea boot. Shapes that have existed for decades because they work visually, not because of a trend. Underneath each one: zero drop, carbon sole, foot-shaped last. The outside looks like a dress shoe. The inside works like bare feet.
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We'll reach out when samples are ready.
You're one of the first 500.