The 788ZX is built the way every GUIDI boot is built -- in Pescia, Tuscany, where the family has been vegetable-tanning leather since 1896. Goodyear welt construction locks the upper to a double leather sole and double heel, creating a foundation that can be resoled decades from now. A single back zip runs from heel to top, keeping the shaft clean and unbroken. No lacing, no buckles, no ornament. The construction is the same as the black 788ZX. The difference is what happens in the dye bath.
The fully assembled boot is submerged whole in pigment drums at Conceria Guidi Rosellini -- GUIDI's object-dyeing process, unchanged across five generations. In green, the dye reveals the grain structure of the vegetable-tanned leather more openly than darker tones. The color pools heavier along the seams and at the heel, paler where the shaft stretches taut across the shin. Under your hand, the surface is firm and cool, with the dense grain of a hide that spent weeks absorbing bark tannins rather than hours in chemical baths. The scent of the tannery -- mineral, vegetal, faintly resinous -- is present when the boots are new.
On first wear, the leather is stiff and narrow through the instep. Within weeks, the vegetable-tanned hide begins mapping the foot -- softening at the flex points, widening where pressure is applied. In green, every wear mark emerges as a lighter trace against the saturated dye. The boot records your stride in a language that black conceals but green makes visible.







