randooch
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,869
- Location
- Ukiah, California
Qu'est-ce que c'est, "topy"?topy will solve that if it bothers you.
(Ignorance is only sometimes bliss.)
Qu'est-ce que c'est, "topy"?topy will solve that if it bothers you.
Those dress boots are nice, I am trying to see the details on the front toe area, what brand are they?
Vinegaroon, the big black bug?
They're a generic make I got at this military store in Tokyo, they're supposed to be replicas of Japanese Army officer private purchase boots. Pretty good price and decent quality. I got another pair I'm trying to die black with vinegaroon right now, has anybody done this before?
Qu'est-ce que c'est, "topy"?
(Ignorance is only sometimes bliss.)
Qu'est-ce que c'est, "topy"?
(Ignorance is only sometimes bliss.)
Bought some Edward Green factory shoes this afternoon. A very nice shoe, but not a touch on the old 30's and 40's vintage shoes made from quality leather.
Goodyear welted construction = a risky construction not built to last a lifetime, and compromised further by a factory environment
Hand welted construction = a construction made to last a lifetime and goes hand in hand with specialist craftsman treatment
* all assuming the upper are looked after of course. Not always black and white, but those factors can be very very important.
* machine and factory environment always compromise integrity of a shoe - pure brutes.
The vingar thing didn't really work (I couldn't find any white vinegar and Japanese vinegar wasn't strong enough to eat away the steel wool) so I bought some regular leather dye and voila- here it is! I was probably not doing it right so the application was uneven but it looks okay after polish. A bit of the brown shows through though, not sure if that will look okay in the sunlight-- I'll try them out tomorrow.
Good spending spree of late!
I like your style, TT
If I were a younger man, that course would sorely tempt me. However . . . it may be too late for a newly adopted physically demanding career. Sigh.Looking at some posts regarding shoe construction and things such as welts, etc., I have been working on some fixes for shoes I own with my cobbler and am learning some real insight to what a shoe is made of. There is a website I was checking out, http://carreducker.com/courses I am so tempted to do this! Geez, to make my own shoes from the materials I would want to find, the way I would desire them to look....a skill if I had would take me from having to purchase another shoe out there! Weeee Haaaw!