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Feiyue.
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You might have seen these sneakers on the feet of celebrities
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like Orlando Bloom
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and Poppy Delevingne.
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Or on Shaolin monks and kung fu masters
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at the Beijing Olympics.
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These light canvas sneakers are a street fashion icon.
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The brand has worked with big names like Céline and Marvel.
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But the thing is,
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there are two Feiyues.
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So how do you know which one you're wearing?
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We're in Rui'an in eastern China.
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It's a small town,
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but it's also a shoemaking powerhouse.
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In this town alone, there are more than 100 shoe factories.
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And every day,
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about 3,000 workers clock into the Feiyue factory here
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to make its iconic shoes.
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The company that owns it is called Dafu,
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and it sells an average five million pairs a year across China.
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That means over 36,000 pairs a day.
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Dafu started as a tire company,
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but it got into shoemaking
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because it had access to a lot of rubber.
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The rubber sole is then glued to a canvas top.
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The shaped shoes then go into a giant vulcanizing oven,
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which is heated at 275 degrees Fahrenheit
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or 135 Celsius.
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This bonds the materials together
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and makes the rubber stronger.
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Every year, the design team comes up with
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13,000 to 15,000 designs for Feiyue sneakers.
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But only about 300 make it to production.
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The most iconic design remains the Feiyue 501,
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with its red and blue stripes.
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The style dates back to the 1950s.
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Back then, the company was actually making military shoes.
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In Chinese, Feiyue means leap forward,
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as in Great Leap Forward,
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when China was hoping to rapidly industrialize
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and overtake the West in just four years.
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The design was inspired by the military shoes
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that Dafu used to make.
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Feiyue became a hit.
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In their first year, the company sold 4.7 million pairs.
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People loved the shoes for their durability,
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light weight,
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and low price.
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Feiyue continued to be popular through the 1970s and '80s.
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But things changed when China opened its market
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to the world in the 1980s.
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Foreign brands like Nike and Adidas quickly overtook Feiyue.
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Dafu went bankrupt in the early 2000s.
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And the rights to Feiyue were sold to the current owners,
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Liu Wangsheng and Liu Qinglong.
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But that's when the other Feiyue comes into the story.
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In 2005, a French entrepreneur named Patrice Bastian
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discovered the shoes while learning martial arts in Shanghai.
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He saw potential to sell them outside China
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and bought the rights to Feiyue.
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The only problem was
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he didn't buy them from the original factory.
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He had actually bought them from a contractor.
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And meanwhile, Bastian started making
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his own Feiyue shoes in France,
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and that's when the brand started to take off.
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It quickly became a favorite of skateboarders
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and the parkour crowd.
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And soon, the collaborations with Marvel and Céline rolled in.
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Meanwhile in China,
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the original Feiyue makers were fuming.
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Because even though Feiyue was soaring worldwide,
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they couldn't sell their shoes overseas
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because Bastian had the rights.
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Despite the bitter legal battle,
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Liu is moving past it.
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The irony is that the French Feiyue
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reintroduced a new generation of Chinese to Feiyue.
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And now Liu and his team are trying to differentiate themselves
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from the French Feiyue.
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And if you can't tell from the price,
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there's always the make of the shoes.
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there's always the make of the shoes.
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Reviews on YouTube say the French Feiyue
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has a stiffer sole than the Chinese one.
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So how can customers outside of China
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get the original Feiyue?
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Actually, you can also get them at the Goldthread Shop.
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Check out our store online.
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I'm wearing a pair right now.
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They're actually the original ones from the factory.
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If you liked that video, we've done a lot of other stories
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about iconic brands on this side of the world,
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including White Rabbit and Vitasoy.
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Check them out at the links below,
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and don't forget to subscribe to @Goldthread2.