A dancer becomes an inventor

Our Founder's Story

Seth Orza in A Million Kisses to My Skin, by David Dawson. Photo by Angela Sterling

The Journey to ORZA

I never set out to reinvent the ballet shoe. I just wanted to keep dancing.

It was around 2005, mid-career at New York City Ballet, when plantar fasciitis stopped me in my tracks. I couldn’t perform. The ballet shoes I’d worn my whole life offered nothing — no cushioning, no structure, no support. Just canvas and a suede sole, the same as they’d been for over a century.

Out of desperation, I started stuffing drugstore heel cups inside my shoes. It wasn’t elegant, but it worked — well enough to keep me on stage, anyway. I used those pads for years — until the company discontinued them. I genuinely panicked, bought every pair I could find, and even contacted the company directly to buy their remaining stock.

It was my physical therapist at Pacific Northwest Ballet who said it first — half joking, half serious: “Why don’t you just make a ballet shoe that actually supports you?”

So I did.

I started with local cobblers in Seattle, layering shock-absorbing materials by hand and testing prototypes with colleagues. The early versions were rough. I traveled to China and Thailand searching for manufacturers who understood what I was trying to build. I collaborated with dance companies across the country, gathering feedback from dancers at every level. What I kept hearing confirmed what I already knew — dancers everywhere were improvising the same fixes I was. The demand for something better was universal.

The turning point came at the Protentrx Health & Performance Laboratory in Seattle, where pedography analysis compared our prototypes against standard ballet shoes. The data confirmed what dancers had been feeling in their bodies for years — additional support wasn’t just helpful, it was essential.

Fourteen years after that first prototype, ORZA launched.

What began as one dancer’s desperate fix became a shoe designed for every dancer — from your first plié to center stage. I hope you feel the difference.

Seth

Ready to start the international search for manufacturing.

The search continued to build our dance shoe.

The launch of Orza, after 14 years of work!