Meet the Halifax entrepreneur whose sole focus is giving shoes swag - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Meet the Halifax entrepreneur whose sole focus is giving shoes swag

Kemmy Smith is the brains behind Kreations by Kemmy, a Halifax company that does custom designs on sneakers and turnsthem into colourful works of art. Rappers, NBA players and Olympic medallists are among his customers.

Kemmy Smith does custom designs on sneakers and turns them into colourful works of art

Kemmy Smith's business of customizing shoes began as a hobby when he was in high school. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)

The roots of Kemmy Smith'sbusiness come from a source ofsomewhat unusualinspiration a casual Friday at his high school in the Bahamas.

The students at Smith's school wore uniforms, but casual Fridays were the exception. On one Friday,he was wearing his red, white and blackScarfaceT-shirt anddecided to pair itwith a white pair of Converse shoes, but he thought the shoes needed more swag.

He decided to paint his shoes using the T-shirt colours and change the laces from whiteto red.

"When you dress down, the shoes have to match the shirt, the shirt has to match the hate," said Smith, the brains behind Kreations by Kemmy, a Halifax company that does custom designs on people's sneakers and turnsthem into colourful works of art.

Other students loved the shoes and asked where he got them. What soon turned into a hobby hasbecome a thriving business about a decade later.

Smith, 25, came to Nova Scotia in 2012 to attend Dalhousie University.

After 1years at the university, he switched to NSCAD University to get a bachelor of fine arts ininterdisciplinary arts where his focus was on design and painting.This change was more in line with his creative interests.

This Kobe Bryant shoe design uses a Vincent van Gogh-style painting look. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)

Smith has always been enterprising.

When he was 15, after having an unpleasant experience while getting a haircut, he started to cut his own hair and watched YouTube videos to learn more. He soon began cutting his friends' hair and apprenticed with some barbers to learn the trade.

As a university student, he cut hair to make money and, despite the 60-plus hours he works each week today on his shoe business, he spends at least 10 hours each week cutting hair.

How barbering helped Smith's business

Cutting hair actually played a pivotal role in Smith's shoe business.

"If you sit in a barbershop all day, you'll get pretty much everything you'll need," he said. "You'll meet your doctor, your lawyer, your accountant ... your politicians, your sheriffs. You meet so many different people that give you all different advice."

One of his clients was Ta'Quan Zimmerman, a former Halifax Hurricanes basketball player who now plays for theCape Breton Highlanders. When Zimmerman saw Smith's shoe work, he asked for a pair.

This shoe is meant to look like a donut. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)

"Because he's a businessman himself, he's like, 'Why don't you turn this into a business?' I'm like, 'Oh, I guess,'" said Smith, whothen wrote up a business plan with the help of a lawyer and accountant.

When customizing shoes, Smith collaborates with the client on ideas and comes up with a final design before carrying out the work.

How the shoes are customized

The process of painting the shoes includessanding them to get rid of the factory paint job and getting the shoe back to its raw material form, then applying a base so the eventual paint job stays in place.

To date, Smith has customized shoes for NBA star Buddy Hield (a fellow Bahamian and Smith's former high school basketball opponent),rappers Robin Banks and Twy,and hockey player Jill Saulnier.

Saulnier's kicks show her laced up for Team Canada. The shoes are displayed at her home alongside memorabilia thatincludesher 2018 Olympic silver medal.

"They're awesome," she said. "I love seeing them every day."

Saulnier loved working with Smith.

The changes Smith makes to shoes sometimes involve more than a paint job. This shoe had spikes added to it. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)

"I love his imagination and the ideas he put forth," said Saulnier."I could tell he was a master in his field and his art just proves that."

Smith has grown the business without borrowing any money.

"Every day, something new comes up for me and I'm just grateful for the opportunities, grateful to [collaborate] with people," he said.

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