After nearly a decade of being one of the top boutique brands in the running world (though they’ve arguably grown large enough to dispatch the “boutique” label), Boston’s Tracksmith has seen the running footwear space lacking — and has decided to fill that gap with their own shoe.
Enter the Eliot Runner.
Looking to develop a shoe that could accommodate any workout, Tracksmith built the Eliot from the ground up, hoping to capture the spirit and feel of the New England running surfaces on which it was tested and toughened.
When visiting the shoe’s page on the Tracksmith website, the copy and images cultivate a specific vibe — one that fans of the brand will find very familiar; think pastoral, New England hills dusted with snow, or the woods you might find surrounding Thoreau’s Walden Pond. The brand wants the runner to ruminate on the specific feeling of running in the Northeast: the subtle cushion from a bed of pine needles, a wood chip path or a spongey old indoor track. It’s about more than just pounding pavement. When wearing the Eliot, Tracksmith contends, you shouldn’t notice the hard surface below your feet at all.
To do this, the brand chose to use Pebax, a springy foam that provides the gold standard in cushioning and support. The insole is thicker (and more comfortable) than any insole I’ve ever run in, while a slightly denser Pebax in the midsole results in a firm ride with just enough give — kind of like, well, pine needles.
After a handful of runs in the shoe, I can say that the designers really did harness some of that New England alchemy (or is it Salem-esque witchcraft?) in creating this shoe; the Pebax insole and midsole combine for a Goldilocks underfoot feel that’s not too squishy and not too firm. Combine that with a tread somewhere between a road shoe and a trail shoe and you’ve got a daily trainer fit for all kinds of surfaces.