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Show us your SHOES !!!

tropicalbob

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,954
Location
miami, fl
Thanks for the warm welcome deadlyhandsome.
Yes, i started designing my own boots a while ago as noone here in my country made anything close to what i wanted as a boot freak, and importing foreign designer boots was getting much more expensive than what i could financialy endure...lol.
It all started as a way of getting the boots i wanted, but slowly became a little boot making company as people loved what i was wearing.... it is called "COFRADIA BOOT MAKERS".
I sell a little , but i do and i only make what people ask me to do, i dont have a stock to sell.
At first, i just designed them and i gave the designs to shoemakers so they built them for me....... After many failed attempts regarding how "SMART" they were (poor materials and build, not the metal accesories or eyelets i asked for, not the leather, sole or shoe shape i wanted, etc) , i started learning the process myself and OMG!.... surprisingly it was not that hard ... at all!..... (at least for me).
The first thing i learned is that the most important thing in shoemaking if you really want to get the shoe shape you want is the LAST!.... so i learned how to design and mill my own lasts... it was very easy for me as i had been a digital 3d animator for more than 20 years now, so i could easily model a last in a 3d program exactly as i wanted.
Now that the boots were going to have the shape i wanted, i needed to learn the rest of the process, and i have been doing that ever since..... i easily learned the cemented construction process, but i figured there were much better ways of attaching the sole to the upper, so i learned the Blake construction process (using a McKay stitcher to stitch the insole to the upper) that generates a much better quality boot than just cementing and now , im becoming really good at good year welting.... no machines, by hand!.... much slower, but MUUUCH BETTER!.
I am slowly getting where i wanted to be and i am proud of what i have achieved until now...... i will update this info as i become a bespoke bootmaker... my goal.
Anyway, i only design and make shoes as a plan b, as i am a digital animator and i make a living as an animator..... making boots is my AWESOME hobbie.
I will be regularly posting pics of all my boots.... those i´ve designed and made and those i´ve bought and i love.
Thanks for your kind answer and your nice apreciation of my work.
Cheers to you and all the best. You might want to think about engineer boots: look at the prices Role Club is getting for his creations and repairs.
 

Michael A

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,287
That is one of the most interesting pair of boots I have ever seen.
Yes, I find them interesting. I found an identical pair on ebay or etsy, forgot to mark it, that were claimed to be 1960s USAF flight boots. I also found quite a few photos of WWII era flight boots that were not completely different, though different in some details. I'm still searching for info sporadically. I will say there are comfortable for sitting around in a cold room.

Michael
 
Messages
19,001
Location
Central California
Ferragamo pebble grain bluchers:


522e9e3050175486f20e402d0854b679.jpg
a53b5aaa4b1bd2c924f6668c57c53517.jpg
490e4b29d2680c62f3b7fe7f65c450f8.jpg


Far from new and showing their age, but comfortable and good for when the weather is nasty. In profile you can't tell the have a lugged sole which helps if you're dressing them up.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Messages
19,001
Location
Central California
That is one of the most interesting pair of boots I have ever seen.

Those are indeed interesting. I've never seen any quite like them. I wish I could help, but I don't even know where to begin. The leather soles with what otherwise look to be an outdoorsy boot is also odd (to my eye quite different than say a 1000 mile boot with a leather sole). They are in great shape, but I wouldn't know where I would wear them.

You always turn up interesting pieces.


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JC ECHEVERRY

New in Town
Messages
13
Location
South America
I picked up these felt and leather boots yesterday. Would appreciate it if someone could pass on any info about them. No labels, save the size that is stamped on the outsole.
DSCN6968 by Michael A2012, on Flickr
DSCN6967 crop by Michael A2012, on Flickr
DSCN6969 by Michael A2012, on Flickr
More like boiled wool than straight felt actually. With a 1/4" or more felt midsole, ~1/4" leather outsole, brown boiled wool lining and wool fleece or sheepskin insole. 8" shaft.

Thanks,
Michael
Those are very interesting from the technical point of view...... You dont have to be a rocket scientist to figure out they were made to endure cold and keep your feet warm during a winter season or a very cold environment...... Many countries military made boots like those for their troops during WWI and WWII........... Anyway.... They were made with the word ENDURANCE in mind.... The clean and very beautiful way they stitched that leather sole to the heavy felt isolating midsole and the insole shows us they wanted them to last for a very long time.... They dont look like being good year welted because the stitch is too far from the edge of the sole and normaly a good year welt is much closer to the edge, so i could bet they are blake constructed and stitched by a Mckay sole stitcher after removing the last.... or manually stitched maybe ...... Anyway, they will last a very long time without the need for a resole. That upper is absolutely PUZZLING!.... The shape of the boot itself is very weird, almost like if they hadnt used a propper set of shoe lasts to shape them...... I guess it is due to some technical considerations i totally ignore.... I consider them interesting like hell, but i dont like their shape (im so vain!)... The upper stitches are very well done too..... Reinforced, Made with care with an emphasis in endurance. They were made to be USEFUL, not FASHIONABLE....... They must have been made for some kind of hard work or for military use..... Anyway.... The fact that the leather sole is not covered by a rubber sole make them a little bit slipperly i think...... And a rubber sole would further isolate the foot from cold..... maybe they are much older than they look.

I found a pair of US vintage air force flight boots in an ebay listing, made much like yours, but with more leather......

https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863926_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863990_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863877_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924864049_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924864082_o.jpg

Maybe yours are flight boots as well...... i would bet they are.

If you want to see how COLD WEATHER FOOTWEAR is made by a Rusian shoe master by hand, you can see this post here....
(of course you will understand as much as i did, but images are self explanatory and that video is worth GOLD)......
As you can see, he uses a heavy felt mid sole like the one you can see in the above posted woolen boots.......
 

Michael A

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,287
Those are very interesting from the technical point of view...... You dont have to be a rocket scientist to figure out they were made to endure cold and keep your feet warm during a winter season or a very cold environment...... Many countries military made boots like those for their troops during WWI and WWII........... Anyway.... They were made with the word ENDURANCE in mind.... The clean and very beautiful way they stitched that leather sole to the heavy felt isolating midsole and the insole shows us they wanted them to last for a very long time.... They dont look like being good year welted because the stitch is too far from the edge of the sole and normaly a good year welt is much closer to the edge, so i could bet they are blake constructed and stitched by a Mckay sole stitcher after removing the last.... or manually stitched maybe ...... Anyway, they will last a very long time without the need for a resole. That upper is absolutely PUZZLING!.... The shape of the boot itself is very weird, almost like if they hadnt used a propper set of shoe lasts to shape them...... I guess it is due to some technical considerations i totally ignore.... I consider them interesting like hell, but i dont like their shape (im so vain!)... The upper stitches are very well done too..... Reinforced, Made with care with an emphasis in endurance. They were made to be USEFUL, not FASHIONABLE....... They must have been made for some kind of hard work or for military use..... Anyway.... The fact that the leather sole is not covered by a rubber sole make them a little bit slipperly i think...... And a rubber sole would further isolate the foot from cold..... maybe they are much older than they look.

I found a pair of US vintage air force flight boots in an ebay listing, made much like yours, but with more leather......

https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863926_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863990_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924863877_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924864049_o.jpg
https://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/1/7/2/6/8/9/0/webimg/924864082_o.jpg

Maybe yours are flight boots as well...... i would bet they are.

If you want to see how COLD WEATHER FOOTWEAR is made by a Rusian shoe master by hand, you can see this post here....
(of course you will understand as much as i did, but images are self explanatory and that video is worth GOLD)......
As you can see, he uses a heavy felt mid sole like the one you can see in the above posted woolen boots.......
First, the video you linked is very cool. I would love to be able to do something like that. They look like super cold weather boots.

I don't know enough about shoe making to be able the comment on the construction techniques. I think some of the shape issues you are seeing are due to the fact that the boiled wool is quite elastic. I think I have seem the shape tightening up after a few wearings and I might guess that if they were dampened and then worn they would shrink to a better fit to the foot. Though for cold weather gear I think a fairly loose fit is preferable for cold protection.

I found a couple of other auctions for USAF flight boots with different leather configurations and also one identical to mine that were claimed, without showing proofs, to be WWII jump boots.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-US...D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Mi...0D-/172740468621?_trksid=p2141725.m3641.l6368

They have proven to be very warm and comfortable to wear. Also lightweight on the feet. For dry winter weather I think they would be a good choice, or for doing the kind of work where you are seated in an unheated environment for long periods of time.

Another photo of mine,
DSCN7132 by Michael A2012, on Flickr
They are lined with a second layer of orange boiled wool and the sole is covered with either a fleece or maybe shearling lamb.

Thanks for the info,
Michael
 
Messages
19,001
Location
Central California
My Jump Corcorans..... they are Army boots but the most stylish there are.... i love how they look and feel.

For years I had a pair of these for my dress boots that only saw ceremonial duties. Several years ago I switched to low quarters when I took a desk job, but the Corcorans were like old friends. They polish up nice too.
 
Messages
19,001
Location
Central California
Brooks Brothers dirty bucks:

15968b06f85d6145b28022ba918f61ba.jpg


I think most of us have a pair of shoes like this. Even when new they were poorly shaped and just a pair I bought because they were on sale. Now despite the soiling and aged, they are still a pair I wear a lot just because they are so comfortable. The outsoles have worn like iron and they feel better on my feet than when they were new. I know they are getting ratty and my wife has started to give me looks when I wear them. Their retirement date is approaching but I'll miss them.


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cookie

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,927
Location
Sydney Australia
I love this boots. I wanted a boot that you could wear in hot weather so i designed this boots.
They are canvas and leather cap toe work boots and they look and feel awesome.


Bienvenido! Those cleats for ventilation remind me of the 1960 era Vietnam boots which I was fortunate to get a pair of as a teenager for the military cadet unit.
 

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