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The Big Deal
Teri Edmonds brings large-sized women’s shoes to Maui

by By Jen Russo

April 19, 2007

Teri Edmonds is a bright eyed, smiling and spunky young

businesswoman. Sitting across from her at Cafe Marc Aurel in Wailuku,

it was hard for me to see her as an up-and-coming shoe designer,

planning her future courses in shoe cobbling. We were talking about her

latest two lines of shoes, Hot Biskit and Wild Plumeria.

"Hot Biskit is more edgy, while Wild Plumeria is a bit more

conservative," Edmonds said. "I have a total of six different designs

in tons of great colors. One has adjustable width straps, the other

sparkle in the straps."

What makes the shoes especially interesting aren't the colors or the sparkles or even the names, but the sizes they come in.



"You want to know what's hot in shoes right now?" she said when

Idropped into her Wailuku store If the Shoe Fits, located next door to

Marc Aurel. "This is going to blow your mind."

Then she pulled out a few sketches of some of her customers' feet,

ranging in size from 13 to 15—three and half to four inches wide.

"Nobody makes shoes for these women," Edmonds said. "These women

want to buy shoes, but nobody is making anything for them. Almost all

lines of shoes go from size six to 10, with the width set at three

inches. These women don't fit anywhere in that model."

Most of us girls take the ability to buy swanky shoes for granted.

We complain that there aren't enough styles available, or that the

available colors just aren't right. But most of us have comparatively

small feet—what if your foot was a special size: where would you buy

cute shoes?

A cursory Internet search for size 13 shoes in extra wide found some

of the most unattractive styles available. They weren't cheap, either,

with prices ranging from $35 to $150. Size 14 wide shoes are even

rarer—I located just two pairs, a sport shoe and flat closed-toe shoe.

Living as we do in the tropics, I can't even imagine wearing the later

shoe, much less ordering it.

"I had this one customer who came in," Edmonds said. "She was a high

school student. Her foot was four inches wide. She wanted to buy a pair

of cute women's shoes. I said I didn't have anything for her, but she

wouldn't leave. She put her backpack down and she begged me to find

something for her. She just sat there and cried. That changed me."

Edmonds begun compiling a data bank of foot sketches. She thought about what shoes sell well. It wasn't going to be easy.



Standard minimum orders for getting shoes manufactured range from

$100,000 to $150,000. Self-funding the launch of her own design

suddenly seemed a very tall order. When she added in factors like the

requirement that the shoes use only eco-friendly, recyclable materials

and the manufacturer's environmental awareness and reputation into the

equation, things only got more complex.

When she finally came up with a design that was large but still what

she'd consider cute, she went to a shoe conference on the mainland to

find a manufacturer that could do a small order for her. She was met

with ridicule.

"What, you want size 15?" one manufacturer told her. "That's not a shoe, that's a boat!"



She eventually did find a manufacturer, which isn't bad, considering

Edmonds opened her shop just six years ago. Even then she was trying to

fit into a niche market.

"I have always been interested in fashion," she said. "I thought

clothing would be more risky, so I chose shoes. Everyone needs shoes."

Since the early days of her store Edmonds has been putting shoes on

the feet of what she calls "the hard-to-fit customer." In the early

days, cross-dressers were a big part of her clientele.

"It started because I was at a gala event fundraiser for Maui AIDS

Foundation," she said. "I found and carried all kinds of wild styles of

platforms, stilettos and heels that catered to the transgendered, as

well as stocking lines of women's business-wear shoes."

She still has the professional styles but she's added her own

designs that cater to the hard-to-fit women and girls. But getting

there wasn't easy. Learning to deal with her manufacturer in China,

delays in receiving the actual products, and having to buy large

quantities have all been challenges in creating her own line.

But Edmonds takes the shoe business seriously. When I asked her what

elements go into designing a great shoe, she replied without

hesitation.

"Arch support," she said. "It's so important. Without it your

posture is ruined, your arch falls; your back goes out of alignment.

Almost no women's shoe has arch support. It's crazy. Number two is

comfort. We live in Hawai`i. Nobody wants to have uncomfortable shoes

here."

Her shoe lines reflect her beliefs, with arch supports, sole

cushioning, as well as lightweight and open-air designs. They come in a

variety of colors—bright spring pinks and oranges to the neutral beige

and blacks. You can buy them in heel or flats and they come in sizes

from six to 15, with an average width of four inches in durable manmade

foam-like materials.

But having succeeded in getting a large women's shoe to a

manufacturer seemed to only whet her appetite. Now she wants to work

with leather.

"Everything I design will be done in the four-inch width with the sizing going up to 15," she said.



In a perfect world, Edmonds said, she would have her own

manufacturing operation on Maui. It would be a semi-cooperative

organization, using recyclable, natural fibers. She'd offer "amazing"

benefits for her employees.

"My factory would be open-air," she said. "Hours would be from 10

a.m. to 4 p.m. and there would be yoga and massage available. We would

grow the shoe materials like bamboo and hemp right there. I would have

a recycling facility for the old shoes. Workers would take turns with

the jobs, one-day work in the garden, the next on the shoes."

Sounds great, but she's still got a line of large women's shoes to start selling. MTW









If the Shoe Fits is located at 12 N. Market St. in Wailuku. For more information call 249-9710.