Telfar is stepping into its next footwear chapter with the Modular shoe line, a three silhouette system of mules, ankle boots, and knee high boots that looks deliberately future facing but is built to flex across everyday outfits. Launching February 27 online and at the brand’s New York flagship, the drop follows Telfar’s collaborations with Converse, Timberland, and UGG, but this time fully under its own name.
A Modular, Future Led Concept
The new line stays true to Telfar’s all gender, subversive, ready to wear, translating that language to a sculptural sole and interchangeable heights. The label frames the collection as straight from the year 3000, using a single, distinctive base that anchors each form factor, knee high boot, ankle boot, and mule, around the same design DNA.
That approach gives Telfar a clear footwear identity from day one, rather than simply reworking existing sneaker or boot templates.
Three Silhouettes, Two Materials
At the top of the range sit knee high boots, offered in smooth leather and a ribbed flyknit that can be styled slouchy or pulled to full height. Below that, close fitting ankle boots share the same sculpted sole and come in both soft nappa leather and knit, tuned for a snug, sock like fit.
The mule completes the trio, using the same ultra modern base with an open back, effectively giving fans a slip on option that still feels like part of the same system.
Color Story and Design
The Modular line lands in four classic colorways, keeping the palette tight so the shapes and textures do most of the talking. That makes it easier to plug the shoes into existing Telfar wardrobes: knits and outerwear on top, sculptural boots below, all reading as one continuous look rather than separate purchases.
From a styling standpoint, the mix of leather and knit gives wearers options for both sharper, polished looks and more casual, fold and slouch fits.
Release and Access
The Modular shoe line releases February 27 via telfar.net and at Telfar’s New York City flagship, with all three silhouettes and four colorways available at launch. Position wise, it signals that Telfar is ready to build a long term footwear category alongside its bags and apparel, not just drop occasional collabs.
This is a notable data point: a culturally powerful, DTC first label is using modular design and tight color control to carve out its own lane in fashion forward, genderless footwear.
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