Tory Burch released a limited-edition jelly version of its Miller Sandal in five color options, according to SheKnows. The jelly material — PVC or similar thermoplastic — transforms a year-round leather staple into a seasonal artifact. The brand signals scarcity through both the material choice and the color count, turning a familiar product into a timed event without retooling the last or changing the core silhouette.
The mechanism is material substitution on a cult product. The Miller Sandal is an established shape with eight years of market validation. Tory Burch swapped leather for jelly, added five seasonal colorways, and declared the run limited. The jelly material carries its own connotations — summer, beach, childhood nostalgia — which narrows the purchase window in the buyer's mind. The five-color array creates a collection dynamic: each shade becomes a discrete SKU with its own supply constraint, even if total unit count is identical to a standard restock.
This works because the scarcity is material and temporal, not artificial. Jelly as a material choice has a logical expiration: it is visibly summer-specific, so the buyer accepts that inventory will not carry into fall. The five-color structure increases perceived variety while keeping production runs shorter per SKU. Each colorway can sell out independently, generating social proof and urgency across the set. The brand incurs no new tooling cost — the mold and pattern remain identical to the leather version — so margin risk is confined to material and inventory.
The steal for a small physical-product brand is to take a proven SKU and issue a limited material variant tied to a season or occasion. Choose a material that signals a narrow use window: canvas for summer, velvet for holiday, metallic for New Year. Keep the form identical. Offer three to five colorways, not one. Announce the run as limited in the product name and the first line of copy. Set inventory per colorway at 60-120 units if you are starting from zero — enough to avoid stockout panic on day one, low enough that each color can credibly sell out within four weeks. Price the variant 10-20 percent above your standard SKU to fund the material swap and signal specialness without pricing out your base. Photograph all colorways in one hero image so the customer sees the set, not a single item. Launch on a specific date, not a rolling release, and retire the product page when inventory zeros out. No restock.
The playbook extends beyond sandals. A tote in waterproof ripstop for spring. A candle in a summer-exclusive vessel. A notebook in a holiday-specific cover material. The form stays constant, the material and the calendar create the gate. The customer buys now because the material itself announces that this version will not return.