Merrell Just Made Hiking Shoes That Look Like They’re Alive

The shoes that make you look twice usually have a story behind them. The Merrell x P.A.M. (Perks and Mini) collaboration is that kind of story, and it starts, surprisingly, in a swamp.

The Australian creative label Perks and Mini teamed up with Merrell to explore two silhouettes you already know: the Chameleon and the Hydro Moc. But the brief wasn’t to simply freshen them up with new colorways or slap a logo on the tongue. The directive was weirder and much more interesting than that: explore amphibian life through form, texture, and function. The result is the Cham Storm GTX and the Hydro Next Gen Moc, two shoes that feel like they were designed at the intersection of a nature documentary and a design school thesis.

Designers: Merrell x P.A.M. (Perks and Mini)

I’ll start with the Cham Storm GTX because it’s the one I keep staring at. The engineered mesh upper gets a custom 3D silicone treatment that reads, unmistakably, as reptile skin. Not in a costume-y way, but in a way that feels considered and intentional, like the design team spent real time studying scale patterns before drawing a single line. A rough sand spray finish adds another layer of texture, and the molded TPU heel counter keeps the whole thing structurally anchored. Underneath all that visual storytelling is a FloatMax foam midsole and Gore-Tex waterproof technology, which means this shoe isn’t just doing aesthetic work. It can handle rain, trails, and whatever else you decide to put it through. The toggle quick-lace system makes getting in and out effortless, which is a small detail but one that matters when you’re moving quickly between environments.

The Hydro Next Gen Moc takes a softer approach. Where the Cham Storm is textured and almost aggressive in its visual language, the Hydro Moc leans into speckle. The EVA foam upper carries a speckled pattern with flecked sidewalls that reads less like armor and more like a frog’s underbelly, in the most complimentary possible way. It’s still loaded with FloatMax foam cushioning, and the easy on/off design makes it the kind of shoe you’ll reach for on days when you need to move from the house to the street to somewhere else without thinking too hard about your feet. The weight barely registers.

What makes this collaboration feel different from the usual outdoor-brand-meets-streetwear-label formula is the conceptual rigor behind it. P.A.M. didn’t just bring an aesthetic direction; they brought a worldview. Amphibious creatures exist in a perpetual in-between state, equally at home on land and in water, which is exactly the kind of cultural positioning that resonates right now. The boundaries between outdoor gear and everyday style have been dissolving for years, and the Merrell x P.A.M. shoes lean into that rather than apologizing for it.

Merrell has always been a brand that lives and dies by its performance credibility. Adding Gore-Tex to a shoe that could easily have coasted on aesthetics alone is a deliberate statement. It’s saying the design and the function are non-negotiable, and that you shouldn’t have to choose between looking interesting and being properly equipped for the day.

The broader conversation this drop enters is about what outdoor footwear is allowed to be. For a long time, “technical” meant beige, and “style-forward” meant sacrificing waterproofing. The Merrell x P.A.M. collaboration doesn’t accept that trade-off. It asks whether a shoe can be inspired by a chameleon, built for wet conditions, carry the creative vision of an independent Australian label, and still be worth wearing on a Tuesday afternoon when nothing remotely swamp-like is happening. The answer, based on what Merrell and P.A.M. put together, is yes.

The Cham Storm GTX and Hydro Next Gen Moc are both available now. Whether you’re buying them for the design, the function, or just the sheer novelty of wearing something that nods to a salamander, they’re worth a closer look.

The post Merrell Just Made Hiking Shoes That Look Like They’re Alive first appeared on Yanko Design.