







Jonak | Dassus Aged Leather Ballerine Flat - Black Noir
A flat, rounded toe and a slender, unbroken vamp define the Jonak Dassus ballerine—a shoe that reads as a single, continuous line of aged black leather. The silhouette is deliberate: neither the saccharine roundness of a classic ballet flat nor the aggressive point of a stiletto pump, but a quiet, sculpted oval that grounds the foot without visual weight. It is a shoe that understands proportion, offering a low profile that elongates the leg while remaining resolutely grounded. The leather is the story. Treated to a “cuir vieilli” finish, the surface carries a faint, irregular patina—a suggestion of wear that is entirely manufactured yet feels organic. It is not a uniform black but a nuanced one, with subtle variations in sheen that catch the light differently with each step. The leather itself is soft, almost pliable, yielding to the shape of the foot without losing its structure. There is no lining to buffer the touch; the raw hide meets the skin, promising a break-in that is more about memory than discomfort. The sole, slim and flexible, offers a tactile connection to the ground, a deliberate choice for a shoe that prioritizes ease of movement over elevation. Construction follows the logic of the material. The cut is female—a term that here denotes a narrower, more refined last through the heel and waist, with a gentle accommodation for the metatarsal. The 1 cm heel is negligible, a mere nod to architecture that keeps the foot parallel to the pavement. The fit, per the maker, runs small; the recommendation to size up is not a concession but a directive, ensuring the shoe sits correctly on the arch rather than pinching the toes. The finish is clean, with no visible stitching at the toe, lending the shoe a monolithic quality that belies its Portuguese craftsmanship. In motion, the Dassus ballerine is silent. It does not announce itself with a heel tap or a creaking sole. The leather flexes with the foot, and the shoe moves as an extension of the wearer rather than an addition. This is a shoe for days that demand a certain frictionless elegance: a morning at the gallery, an afternoon of errands in the 6th, a dinner where the dress code is “intentional but not fussy.” Style it with a wide-leg trouser that skims the ankle, allowing the flat silhouette to anchor the volume above. Or with a midi skirt in a weighty crepe, the bare leather of the shoe a counterpoint to the fabric’s drape. It works across seasons—a summer uniform with a linen dress, a winter companion to cropped wool trousers and a cashmere sock. The key is to let the shoe be the punctuation: quiet, final, and entirely self-assured.
Original: $25.26
-65%$25.26
$8.84Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
A flat, rounded toe and a slender, unbroken vamp define the Jonak Dassus ballerine—a shoe that reads as a single, continuous line of aged black leather. The silhouette is deliberate: neither the saccharine roundness of a classic ballet flat nor the aggressive point of a stiletto pump, but a quiet, sculpted oval that grounds the foot without visual weight. It is a shoe that understands proportion, offering a low profile that elongates the leg while remaining resolutely grounded. The leather is the story. Treated to a “cuir vieilli” finish, the surface carries a faint, irregular patina—a suggestion of wear that is entirely manufactured yet feels organic. It is not a uniform black but a nuanced one, with subtle variations in sheen that catch the light differently with each step. The leather itself is soft, almost pliable, yielding to the shape of the foot without losing its structure. There is no lining to buffer the touch; the raw hide meets the skin, promising a break-in that is more about memory than discomfort. The sole, slim and flexible, offers a tactile connection to the ground, a deliberate choice for a shoe that prioritizes ease of movement over elevation. Construction follows the logic of the material. The cut is female—a term that here denotes a narrower, more refined last through the heel and waist, with a gentle accommodation for the metatarsal. The 1 cm heel is negligible, a mere nod to architecture that keeps the foot parallel to the pavement. The fit, per the maker, runs small; the recommendation to size up is not a concession but a directive, ensuring the shoe sits correctly on the arch rather than pinching the toes. The finish is clean, with no visible stitching at the toe, lending the shoe a monolithic quality that belies its Portuguese craftsmanship. In motion, the Dassus ballerine is silent. It does not announce itself with a heel tap or a creaking sole. The leather flexes with the foot, and the shoe moves as an extension of the wearer rather than an addition. This is a shoe for days that demand a certain frictionless elegance: a morning at the gallery, an afternoon of errands in the 6th, a dinner where the dress code is “intentional but not fussy.” Style it with a wide-leg trouser that skims the ankle, allowing the flat silhouette to anchor the volume above. Or with a midi skirt in a weighty crepe, the bare leather of the shoe a counterpoint to the fabric’s drape. It works across seasons—a summer uniform with a linen dress, a winter companion to cropped wool trousers and a cashmere sock. The key is to let the shoe be the punctuation: quiet, final, and entirely self-assured.























