That signature yellow stitch is what makes a Dr Martens boot. There are so many other makers of beefy black leather shoes — including Solovair, which originally produced Dr Martens footwear — but only one stitches its soles with yellow.
And yet here we have Dr Martens switching its stitching for a capsule of shoes sewn in in white. What’s going on?
This is another round of Dr Martens Japan’s “White Stitch” shoe series, which remix classic Dr Martens shapes with, yes, crisp white stitches.
It’s a small touch but one with major consequences for familiar silhouettes. In monochrome, for instance, Dr Martens’ inimitable 1460 boot looks almost like a luxury shoe, or maybe something from a heritage brand. Well, almost.
Regardless, there remains an air of modest elegance surrounding Dr Martens’ white-sewn shoes. Can’t deny that.
The original round of Dr Martens Japan’s White Stitch shoes included its most classic options, including the 1460 boot and 1461 derby.
For this new offering, Dr Martens makes the most of several newer shoes, several of which are quite popular among young shoppers (or so TikTok would have you believe).
Here, the Adrian loafer, Polley mary jane, Jadon platform boot, and 1461 Bex — basically the ordinary 1461 shoe with an additional zipper for easy access — are reimagined in exactly the way you’d think they’d be.
Same Dr Martens shapes, new white stitching. Ta-da!
Blacking-out Dr Martens’ trademark yellow stitch is a practice so commonplace that Dr Martens will occasionally offer shoes with black stitching to achieve a distinctly stealth appearance fresh outta the box.
It’s also offered white-stitched shoes on occasion though a shade less commonly.
Though it’s far more contrasted, it’s nearly as understated as the black stitching, perhaps because the white stitches retain the shoes’ monochrome appeal.
As the new White Stitch collection is currently available on Dr Martens Japan’s website as part of its Spring/Summer 2025 offering, it’s possible that it’ll see a wider release in coming months.
That’d make sense both because it centers on several already popular shoes — no Isham clog, unfortunately — and because Dr Martens is clearly still focused on innovation, even after the departure of longtime creative overseer Darren McKoy.