Seattle-based shoe designer Kira Bundlie is a great collaborator, the kind who insists upon sharing the credit. Even when it involves Lady Gaga.
Bundlie, who was raised in Eagan, and Lisa Strom, co-founders of Hourglass Footwear, were asked to design shoes for Lady Gaga by the X's PR manager, Jora Bart. When performers come to St. Paul's Xcel Energy Center, Bart likes to send them off with a gift to remember Minnesota fondly. Bundlie flew in from Seattle to deliver the shoes. She and her colleagues got tickets to the performance, but in the end they were not able to arrange a meeting with Gaga.
While coordinating my startribune.com/video with Bundlie, she made it clear that she wanted her colleagues on the project to play a prominent role in reporting this exciting chapter in their shoe studio's life. So Bundlie met me at Bob's Java Hut (where else but a coffee shop -- they are from Seattle!) with Strom and an artist who painted the Gaga shoes, Debbie Faas. Fass noted that another artist, Rachel J.E. Sprague, also helped paint the bee-and-honeycomb motif. Lady Gaga is the Queen Bee of her Little Monsters.
Kira's sister, Bryn, who lives in Minneapolis, and their parents, Eric and Susan Bundlie, also dropped by the coffee shop because they all had roles in chauffeuring the visiting shoe designers around town.
Q Kira, how did you celebrate the news that you were designing shoes for Lady Gaga's feet?
A We got the e-mail from Jora. It was a kind of quiet evening at the studio, post holidays. It came in and I read [the e-mail] to Lisa four times. It took a while for it to sink in. There may have been some cheap wine involved. Very fun news.
Q Now that you've made shoes for Lady Gaga, are there any other celebrities for whom you'd like to design some kicks?
A [Kira:] We've been talking about this. There are two: Michelle Obama would be ideal. We have this portion of our [website] called "We've got (iss)shoes," and we like to support the causes that our artists find important. They decide the portion of their own commission that they want to go to that nonprofit, and we match it. Debbie designed a "Democratic Platform" with all the Obama logos. We are hoping to get Michelle in a pair of "Democratic Platforms."