Eighth Generation shoes: Made for walking in two worlds with style

Photo courtesy Victor Pascual/DGTL NVJO

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Eighth Generation shoes: Made for walking in two worlds with style

By Dana Arviso, Today correspondent

SEATTLE – It happens to me everywhere I go, but this time I was caught off guard. I was standing on the banks of Port Madison Bay where the annual Intertribal Canoe Journey landings were being hosted by the Suquamish Tribe. As I watched the amazing sight of more than 90 canoes come in, a woman dressed in full Coast Salish regalia, a beautiful floor-length cedar dress, woven cedar hat and vest made of dark blue glass beads and bone stopped to talk to me. “Where did you get those shoes? They are incredible! Make sure that you wear those with pride.”

The shoes are a pair of red wolf custom Coast Salish style Vans by Louie Gong. His work has attracted the attention of thousands through word of mouth, newspaper articles, blogs, Myspace, twitter, and a rapidly growing Facebook fan page with well over 2,100 fans.

Photo courtesy Louie Gong/Eighth Generation

These Killer Whale Vans were designed by Louie Gong, who owns Eighth Generation.

While the attention and enthusiasm has inspired Gong to keep designing new shoes, it has also been a bit overwhelming. Requests to order the shoes have numbered in the hundreds in the past few months alone. “When I start taking orders, I usually reach capacity for the month in just a couple hours. I wish I could make a shoe for everyone who connects with them, but it’s just not possible.” At present, Louie has visions of collaborating with larger shoe manufacturers such as Vans to produce one of his designs so his customers might one day be able to purchase them off the shelf and at a lower cost.

Who is the man behind the shoes? Gong is a mixed heritage person (Nooksack, Chinese, French, Scottish) who works as an activist “on behalf of people who walk in multiple worlds.” In addition to his day job as the educational resource coordinator at Muckleshoot Tribal College, he is board president of MAVIN, one of the nation’s leading mixed race organizations. His racial identity work has been featured on MSNBC.com, and he recently provided a keynote presentation for the National Tribal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families conference. According to Gong, designing custom shoes is an extension of his activism.

While his shoe fans are immediately impressed by the quality of the art, those who continue to engage with Gong begin to understand that “the conversations that the shoes spark is the true artistry.” The message behind his art is that “you can have a strong cultural identity while still exploring popular culture and style – these things are not mutually exclusive. We can merge our expressions of identity rather than compartmentalizing them. It’s okay to be both.”

Gong’s company, Eighth Generation, was established in March 2009. It’s important to him for people to understand that

Photo courtesy Clarita Begay

Pictured here are Eagle Vans with artist, Louie Gong, owner of Eighth Generation.

“Eighth Generation started organically, not as a business idea.” He made his first pair for himself, as a way of fulfilling a dream deferred since childhood to be able to afford a pair, and to have the confidence and style to wear them. Once in the store, he felt that he “couldn’t connect with the patterns on the shelf. None of them represented my experiences or culture,” which prompted him to take a Sharpie marker to a pair of plain grey Vans.

Since that first shoe, Gong has refined his designs, artistic skills and tools, and recently shared his hard-earned knowledge in a how-to video titled, “Make Sick Shoes: Custom Vans and Chucks by Louie Gong,” available on YouTube. The video, which was recently featured on thevansblog.blogspot.com and the Vans 300,000 member Facebook page, explains the basics of making custom shoes so people across the world can create shoes that represent their own identity and raise social consciousness about what it means to self-identify on your own terms.

It’s Gong’s way of giving back to his fans. It’s also a way he seeks to inspire youth to understand that success is built upon process and that “failure is part of success, persistence is key.”

He originally began by customizing Vans, but in recent months he has started experimenting with designs on Converse Chuck Taylors and Nike N7s. The Eighth Generation Web site features a gallery of the shoes and the Facebook page often offers glimpses into Gong’s creative process by showing his experimental in-progress designs. Gong is also the focus of a short film by Longhouse Media that will premiere at the Native American Film Festival in Bellevue, Wash. Nov. 6. An art show held at the same time will showcase the full range of his art.

Monday, Oct 19 at 6:53 PM IndianMaiden09- wrote ...

Awesome soul kicks!Need a pair for myself. Where can I get a pair of those. About time, someone has made a native moc-stylish.

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Wednesday, Sep 9 at 3:11 AM t.su'a wrote ...

would look awesome on a pair of boots, or a pair of leggings.

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Friday, Sep 4 at 4:27 PM joe wrote ...

slick, slick, slick!

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Thursday, Sep 3 at 1:35 PM BENITA wrote ...

RIGHT ON KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK ILL SEE YOU SOON KEEP AIMING HI

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Wednesday, Sep 2 at 10:00 PM Ernest E. Yakama Nation Member wrote ...

Nice kicks! You ever consider making a design for us Columbia River fisherman? Salmon designs. We need new fins. And your shoes could be them. I will be on the look out for them.

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Thursday, Aug 27 at 10:36 AM Smallbear wrote ...

These are beautiful designs, but the shoes continue modern abuse of human feet in the way they function. I would like to see what Louie Gong could do with a pair of Vibram Five-Finger shoes to make them more attractive. VFF shoes enable the wearer to more closely experience the health of barefoot walking, just as mocassins do.

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Tuesday, Aug 25 at 11:11 AM Melanie McAulay wrote ...

Louie your shoes are great looking and they look comfortable. I work with your father and he is so proud of you, keep up the good work.

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Tuesday, Aug 25 at 8:45 AM ggong wrote ...

From cedar to shoes, from soul to art, from one to all, these shoes are profound in form and purpose...my son, Louie you make me proud...you and the shoes are awesome..grandparents are smiling over you

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Tuesday, Aug 25 at 1:55 AM indopinoy wrote ...

fello Noxwasa'7aq holden down way to dress up dem feet ......

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Monday, Aug 24 at 12:41 PM B. Ray wrote ...

Well done G-Man, and well said D.A. Way to go!! And let me just state publicly AGAIN, I love love love my kicks! B. Ray - proud 8th Gen Shoes owner and MAVIN Board member.

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Monday, Aug 24 at 11:15 AM Mike Tulee wrote ...

Louie, You Da Man!

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Friday, Aug 21 at 9:08 PM Darrell wrote ...

love them, make a winter pair to match!!

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Friday, Aug 21 at 6:03 PM NP wrote ...

I like! Can't wait till I can buy a pair of my own!

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Friday, Aug 21 at 5:01 PM CubicleJot wrote ...

The art on these shoes are beautiful. It inspires me to want to do something to represent my own cultural identity. Great message, great shoes!!!

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Friday, Aug 21 at 11:40 AM Cynthia wrote ...

Thank you for this article! Louie's work and his dedication and story behind it are inspiring and incredible. You can tell he does not only art for art's sake but for wider community and cultural expression. Plus, when i wear his sick shoes i automatically become about 300 times cooler.... ;)

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Thursday, Aug 20 at 10:20 PM Lee wrote ...

this is something special. they got soul!

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Thursday, Aug 20 at 8:47 PM K.Benedict wrote ...

A lot of people in akwesasne would like to buy a pair

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Thursday, Aug 20 at 8:47 PM K.Benedict wrote ...

I want to buy a pair

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Thursday, Aug 20 at 8:29 PM Crystal Starr wrote ...

Thank you for highlighting Louie Gong in Indian Country Today. I've enjoyed his expression in this contempory art form that still links him with part of his culture. He's been generious enough to share how to make sick shoes on youtube. i get inspired every time I see a new pari of kicks hes done.

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