Nike knows sneakers. And innovation. The brand has been one of the leading forces for both worlds since the jump. And that tradition continues today with the brand's latest fabrication drop, Flyleather.

Much like Nike Flyknit, the brand is angling to Flyleather change the way the industry looks at the sneaker fabric. The reimagined leather is a lighter, stronger — 40 percent light and five times stronger — material made with leftover leather scraps and synthetic fibers, an eco-friendly process that lets no material go unused.

The production process also uses less water and has a lower carbon footprint than other leather and sneaker manufacturing techniques. It's an approach the brand wants to instil in every product it makes.

“Nike believes in science, and that climate change is real,” says Hannah Jones, Nike chief sustainability officer and VP of the innovation accelerator. “That’s why Flyleather is a game-changer. As we witness the impact of climate change, the world is getting a low-carbon economy, and Nike is innovating it.”

Flyleather is the first of many plans for the brand to explore modern, sustainable production methods and sneaker fabrications. The first sneaker with the fabric is dropping today on the Nike Tennis Classic. The Air Force 1, Air Max 90, Cortez, and Jordan 1 will follow suit. It's an environment-improving fabric blended with timeless sneaker shapes—is there a better way to save the earth?

From Esquire