Supreme x Yuketen Bring the Hand-Woven Leo in Three Colorways
SummarySupreme and Yuketen have collaborated on a custom version of the Leo, featuring a hand-cut vegetable-tanned leather upper and Vibram outsole, hand-woven in Mexico exclusively for Supreme across three colorwaysThe build includes a debossed co-branded footbed and an engraved logo metal plate at the heel, details that signal a finishing standard closer to fine goods than conventional streetwear footwearThe Leo releases globally on June 25, with Asia receiving the shoe on June 27Supreme and Yuketen have introduced a collaborative version of the Leo, a hand-woven shoe built from hand-cut vegetable-tanned leather with a Vibram outsole, produced exclusively for Supreme in Mexico and arriving in three colorways.Yuketen's founding logic is relevant context here. Yuki Matsuda established the label in 1989 with a focus on traditional American footwear construction interpreted through a Japanese sensibility for material quality and process integrity, and the brand has maintained that position across more than three decades without significant deviation. The Leo sits within that tradition as a hand-woven silhouette, a construction method that requires considerably more time and labor input per pair than standard cut-and-stitch assembly, and one that produces results in surface texture and structural behavior that machine production cannot replicate.The upper material is vegetable-tanned leather, which is the older and more labor-intensive of the two primary leather tanning methods. Vegetable tanning uses organic tannins derived from plant matter rather than the chromium salts used in chrome tanning, a process that takes weeks rather than days and produces a leather that starts firm, develops a patina with wear, and responds to the shape of the foot over time. The decision to hand-cut the upper rather than die-cut it introduces an additional layer of craft specificity, allowing the cutter to work around irregularities in the hide rather than treating the material as a uniform substrate.The Vibram outsole anchors the build at the functional level. Vibram's compound and tread geometry bring grip and durability to a shoe whose upper construction might otherwise position it purely as a dressed-up casual option, keeping the Leo credible as a shoe that can be worn rather than preserved. The debossed co-branded footbed and engraved logo metal plate at the heel are the collaboration's two most visible identity markers, handled with enough restraint to complement rather than compete with the craft story the upper tells. An engraved metal plate in particular is a detail more common in heritage leather goods than in sneakers or casual footwear, and its presence here signals the finishing register Yuketen was working toward.The fact that the shoe was hand-woven in Mexico exclusively for this collaboration is worth dwelling on. Mexico has a deep tradition of hand-woven leather goods and huarache construction, and producing the Leo there rather than in a conventional footwear manufacturing context connects the shoe to a specific craft lineage rather than simply outsourcing the hand-weaving process to wherever it is cheapest to execute. Three colorways are offered, giving the collaboration enough range to address different wear contexts without diluting the focus of the build.The Supreme x Yuketen Leo releases June 25 globally, with Asia receiving the shoe on June 27.Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast

Summary
Supreme and Yuketen have collaborated on a custom version of the Leo, featuring a hand-cut vegetable-tanned leather upper and Vibram outsole, hand-woven in Mexico exclusively for Supreme across three colorwaysThe build includes a debossed co-branded footbed and an engraved logo metal plate at the heel, details that signal a finishing standard closer to fine goods than conventional streetwear footwearThe Leo releases globally on June 25, with Asia receiving the shoe on June 27
Supreme and Yuketen have introduced a collaborative version of the Leo, a hand-woven shoe built from hand-cut vegetable-tanned leather with a Vibram outsole, produced exclusively for Supreme in Mexico and arriving in three colorways.
Yuketen's founding logic is relevant context here. Yuki Matsuda established the label in 1989 with a focus on traditional American footwear construction interpreted through a Japanese sensibility for material quality and process integrity, and the brand has maintained that position across more than three decades without significant deviation. The Leo sits within that tradition as a hand-woven silhouette, a construction method that requires considerably more time and labor input per pair than standard cut-and-stitch assembly, and one that produces results in surface texture and structural behavior that machine production cannot replicate.
The upper material is vegetable-tanned leather, which is the older and more labor-intensive of the two primary leather tanning methods. Vegetable tanning uses organic tannins derived from plant matter rather than the chromium salts used in chrome tanning, a process that takes weeks rather than days and produces a leather that starts firm, develops a patina with wear, and responds to the shape of the foot over time. The decision to hand-cut the upper rather than die-cut it introduces an additional layer of craft specificity, allowing the cutter to work around irregularities in the hide rather than treating the material as a uniform substrate.
The Vibram outsole anchors the build at the functional level. Vibram's compound and tread geometry bring grip and durability to a shoe whose upper construction might otherwise position it purely as a dressed-up casual option, keeping the Leo credible as a shoe that can be worn rather than preserved. The debossed co-branded footbed and engraved logo metal plate at the heel are the collaboration's two most visible identity markers, handled with enough restraint to complement rather than compete with the craft story the upper tells. An engraved metal plate in particular is a detail more common in heritage leather goods than in sneakers or casual footwear, and its presence here signals the finishing register Yuketen was working toward.
The fact that the shoe was hand-woven in Mexico exclusively for this collaboration is worth dwelling on. Mexico has a deep tradition of hand-woven leather goods and huarache construction, and producing the Leo there rather than in a conventional footwear manufacturing context connects the shoe to a specific craft lineage rather than simply outsourcing the hand-weaving process to wherever it is cheapest to execute. Three colorways are offered, giving the collaboration enough range to address different wear contexts without diluting the focus of the build.
The Supreme x Yuketen Leo releases June 25 globally, with Asia receiving the shoe on June 27.




