Camper x Issey Miyake Sneakers Started With a Book of Birds

Not every sneaker collaboration deserves attention. Most of them follow a predictable script: take a classic silhouette, swap a few colors, slap two logos on the tongue, and call it a limited drop. Which is why when Camper and Issey Miyake unveiled the Karst Finch for SS 2026, I sat up a little straighter.

The story behind it matters. According to Satoshi Kondo, creative director of Issey Miyake’s womenswear line, the design team spent part of their development phase poring over photo books of finches and other small birds. They weren’t studying aerodynamics or engineering anything structural. They were just looking, really looking, at the richness and subtlety of bird plumage and beaks, and letting that translate into a color palette for a shoe. That’s either delightfully eccentric or genuinely brilliant. I think it’s both.

Designers: Camper x Issey Miyake

The name itself tells you a lot. “Karst” references one of Camper’s most distinctive existing silhouettes, a shoe named after a rocky geological formation known for its rugged, organically shaped terrain. The outsole of the original Karst reflects that: it has a lumpy, almost topographic quality that looks like it came up from the earth rather than out of a factory mold. “Finch” layers something entirely different on top of it, lightness, color, a kind of cheerful energy. The combination of those two words is basically a thesis statement for what this shoe is trying to do.

Camper is Spanish, practical, and deeply rooted in a no-nonsense approach to footwear. Issey Miyake is Japanese, sculptural, and preoccupied with the relationship between material, body, and movement. These two brands don’t obviously belong together, and that friction is exactly what makes this collaboration interesting. Kondo noted that both companies share a way of thinking about design that goes beyond fashion, that both engage with other creative disciplines and communities rather than operating purely within the style bubble. I believe that. You can feel it in the shoe.

The Karst Finch is built from recycled PET engineered materials, sits on a Vibram rubber outsole, and uses a ReXarge midsole with an OrthoLite recycled footbed. It’s a sustainability story told quietly, without the usual chest-thumping. The recycled polyester lining and the thoughtful material choices feel like a given here rather than a selling point, which is how it should be. And yes, it’s also genuinely comfortable, which matters more to me than it probably should when discussing something this aesthetically considered. A beautiful shoe you can’t walk in is just an expensive sculpture.

What really lands is the color approach. The pastel yellows, the muted tones, the colorways that feel like they were borrowed from a naturalist’s watercolor study: this is not the saturated, aggressive palette that usually comes with high-profile sneaker drops. It’s quieter than that. More considered. Each pair also comes with two pairs of socks for customization, which is a small detail but a telling one. It signals that whoever designed this understood the shoe doesn’t need to shout.

The Karst Finch made its public debut closing out Issey Miyake’s Spring 2026 runway at Paris Fashion Week, which is an unusual place for a sneaker to land. Runways don’t usually end with footwear as a statement piece, and it’s telling that this one did. It read as a kind of exhale after everything else on the runway, lighter, brighter, and a little more open to joy.

There’s a version of this collaboration that could have been very safe. Instead, the Karst Finch is a shoe built on genuine curiosity: about birds, about material, about what happens when a Majorcan shoe company and a Tokyo fashion house actually sit down and listen to each other. At $320, it’s not an impulse buy. But it’s the kind of thing you pick up because you want it to last, and because the story behind it is worth wearing. The Karst Finch drops globally on April 15, 2026.

The post Camper x Issey Miyake Sneakers Started With a Book of Birds first appeared on Yanko Design.

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