Skip to content

Billy Footwear Adaptive Shoes Take Anyone, Anywhere

Billy Price designs adaptive shoes that work for anybody

By Sarah Murphy December 22, 2016

1216_shoes

This article originally appeared in the December 2016 issue of Seattle magazine.

Walking into Billy Price’s Capitol Hill condo, you notice the exceptional view of downtown, the plush lounge chair perfect for brainstorming startup dreams, and Price himself, a quadriplegic. Drawing less attention are his leather Oxford shoes with a subtle zipper around the toe. Price, who became quadriplegic after a 1996 accident that occurred during his first week at the University of Washington, has enough dexterity to dress himself, but shoes have been a challenge. His solution? Billy Footwear. “The root problem was not being able to tie laces and having to shove my foot into the shoe,” says Price. Trained as a mechanical engineer, he approached the problem methodically. His goal was a shoe that didn’t use a Velcro closure, the hallmark of “adaptive” footwear, and that was fashionable enough that anyone might want to wear it. “I bought a tiny shoe, cut it open, put a zipper on it, and it worked,” he says of his design process. The zipper doesn’t require the dexterity of laces, and the design opens the shoe in a way that makes it easy to slide a foot into. He and business partner Darin Donaldson have created an attractive line of shoes (at billyfootwear.com) that anyone might choose to wear.  His next goal is getting Billy Footwear into stores. “When you get knocked down, your life is not over,” says the resilient entrepreneur. He adds, “People look at our shoes and say, ‘I can’t believe someone hasn’t come up with this already.’” 


NEED TO KNOW

Price’s first creation, an adaptive ski glove (he’s a sit-skier), came to life with the help of Pearl Jam, which donated use of its “Given to Fly” tune for the glove’s Kickstarter campaign video. (Find the glove at getbillysgoat.com.) 

Billy Footwear was featured on Quit Your Day Job on the Oxygen channel last April.  

There are seven styles available for men, women and kids, including the kids’ green “Billy Club Ranger,” women’s chevron high top and men’s black casual loafer. Prices range from $50 to $110.

Follow Us

Rearview Mirror: An Oyster Party, Money for Art, and Mac & Cheese at 30,000 Feet 

Rearview Mirror: An Oyster Party, Money for Art, and Mac & Cheese at 30,000 Feet 

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

We Partied for Art I love a party, and I love art, so when the Henry Art Gallery invited me to its annual fundraising gala, it was paddle’s up from the get-go. Held on the floor of Pioneer Square’s Railspur building in a space managed by Rally, Angela Dunleavy’s latest venture (read all about it…

Urban Grit Meets Wild Beauty: Inside Seattle Art Museum’s Beyond Mysticism
Sponsored

Urban Grit Meets Wild Beauty: Inside Seattle Art Museum’s Beyond Mysticism

Seattle’s history is rooted in its fascinating juxtaposition of industry and nature, inspired by the region’s dramatic landscapes and rapidly changing cityscape. Seattle Art Museum’s current exhibition, Beyond Mysticism: The Modern Northwest, invites you to meet the artists who captured that tension and transformed it into a bold new vision of Modernism. Modernism, Made in…

Our March/April Issue Has Arrived!

Our March/April Issue Has Arrived!

Inside you’ll find Best Places to Live, a packed spring arts guide, and more stories from across the region.

The future’s bright, and so is the cover of Seattle magazine’s March/April issue! Featuring a mural by local artist (and 2023 Most Influential pick) Stevie Shao, the colorful cover is a snap from Woodinville, one of the six “Best Places to Live” featured inside. While we usually focus on Seattle neighborhoods, this year we expanded…

Supporting Roles

Supporting Roles

Three women in the Northwest are helping local artists through newly launched residencies outside of Seattle. Here, we take a look inside these thoughtfully designed spaces, and learn what drove their founders to become cornerstones in the creative community.

Iolair Artist Residency Eastsound, WA Years ago, after studying photography and earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Washington, Pacific Northwest native Linda Lewis realized that she didn’t want to spend the rest of her life behind a camera. “The minute I graduated from school, I was far more inspired by the…