Reinventing clog making
- Elena has adapted this popular and traditional craft to modern times
- She has a master’s degree in Leather Design from the Loewe Foundation
- Three generations of the Ferro family have worked in the workshop
Elena Ferro leads the third generation of wooden clog makers in her family. Along with her sisters, she keeps alive this artisan practice, which has always been in danger of disappearing since the industrial revolution. Her father and aunt taught her the techniques of the craft and to take pride in the work made in the family workshop. At 18, after finishing high school, she took over the workshop created by her grandfather in 1915 in the town of Merza (Pontevedra). Since then, she has been creating clogs and other leather goods with innovative designs and colours that are inspired by the nature of the Galician region. In 2019, Elena was awarded the National Craftsmanship Award for reinventing this humble footwear as a fashionable accessory.
Discover her work
INTERVIEW
Our work is very traditional, but also creative and innovative. We have adapted the handcrafted manufacture of clogs to modern times, using innovative designs.
Our skills lie in the design and layout of our products. Die-cutting, sewing and assembly of our pieces are particularly important to us. So is the work we do with leather.
Respecting the handcrafted tradition of clog making, we have updated our products and brought them into the present. We have incorporated cow leather, created new patterns and adapted their footstep to make them as comfortable as possible.
Clog making is closely linked to the rural environment. Although we now practise this tradition in a different way, we continue to work from the countryside to keep it alive. Our workshop is in the same place where my grandfather founded it, when he started in 1915.

































