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Inside the Marikina-Made Banana Fiber Shoes at Miss Universe Philippines 2026

  • Jules Vivas
  • Culture
  • May 5, 2026

Crafted from banana fiber and other Philippine textiles, the Marikina-made shoes point to a more technical and self-reliant future for local footwear

When the candidates of Miss Universe Philippines 2026 stepped onto the stage, most eyes went to the gowns, the styling, and the spectacle.

A few looked down. What they saw was a small but telling shift. The candidates were wearing shoes made in Marikina, built locally using materials developed by Filipino scientists. Abaca, banana fiber, bamboo, pineapple leaves. Fibers long used in Philippine textiles, now engineered for footwear.

The shoes came out of a collaboration led by the Department of Science and Technology through the Philippine Textile Research Institute, working with the Philippine Footwear Federation and Marikina-based manufacturers.

The work runs through the SAFATOS Program, short for Shoes and Footwear Accessories R&D Towards Omnibus Solutions. It is technical by design, but the goal is straightforward. Improve how shoes are made and rebuild the local footwear industry, not just its marketing.

For a city long known as the country’s shoe capital, Marikina has been navigating a quieter problem. Much of the industry still depends on imported materials and sizing systems that were never designed for Filipino consumers. The result shows up in both cost and fit.

SAFATOS addresses that at multiple levels.

On materials, it develops textile uppers and insoles using locally available fibers, reducing reliance on imports. On production, it introduces computer-assisted manufacturing and mass customization, improving consistency without sacrificing flexibility. On the user side, it applies a Filipino-standardized sizing system based on local measurements rather than borrowed international charts.

That last part sounds minor, but it solves a familiar issue. Many locally available shoes almost fit, but not quite. Adjusting sizing to actual Filipino proportions makes the product more usable without requiring the wearer to adapt.

Using Miss Universe Philippines as a platform is deliberate. Pageants operate on visibility. Every detail is photographed, circulated, and scrutinized. Placing the shoes in that environment puts the work in front of a wider audience, not just buyers but observers who shape perception.

The objective is not simply to showcase a product. It is to demonstrate that locally made footwear can meet technical and manufacturing standards expected at a global level.

As Julius L. Leaño Jr. points out, the longer-term goal goes beyond a single collaboration. The focus is on strengthening manufacturing by linking research, raw materials, and production more closely. Instead of exporting fibers and importing finished goods, the aim is to move more of the value chain locally.

Natural fibers like abaca and pineapple are part of that shift, not only for sustainability but for supply stability. These are materials the Philippines already produces at scale. Applying them to higher-value products like footwear changes where the value sits.

What emerges is less a fashion story than an industrial one, presented on a fashion stage.

The shoes were never meant to be the headline. But they point to a different direction for an industry that has spent years trying to stay relevant.

If people begin asking where the shoes were made, how they were built, and why they fit differently, then the effort has already done what it set out to do.

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