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9th December 2009

Photo reblogged from Put This On with 5 notes

putthison:

Q and Answer
John from Arlington asks us:
I wear through the (leather) soles of my dress shoes at an alarming rate. What can I do to maximize their life?
Some people walk more, or have odd gaits, or spend more time in wet places, or whatever… and they wear through their soles.  First of all, you should be sure that you’re buying shoes with welted soles, not glued soles, so their replaceable.  That means no $60 dress shoes for you (unless they’re on sale).
But there is something else you can do.  For about $2, your cobbler can add heel and toe protectors to the soles of your shoes.  They’re nailed in at the outside of the back of the heel and at the toe - the two places where your foot hits the pavement hardest.  These pieces of hard plastic take a beating so your soles don’t have to, and they can be replaced whenever they need to be for another five bucks or so.
One word of warning: they do make a little bit of clickety-clack if you’re a clickety-clack walker.  We like to think of that as our “portentous approach” sound.  Because we’re bad-asses.

Putting these on the toe wouldn’t help the sole. For that you need the leather sole with the rubber grip in the middle of them. If you take that approach, never wear them to an event where you might have to dance. You’ll sprain your knee trying to spin.

putthison:

Q and Answer

John from Arlington asks us:

I wear through the (leather) soles of my dress shoes at an alarming rate. What can I do to maximize their life?

Some people walk more, or have odd gaits, or spend more time in wet places, or whatever… and they wear through their soles.  First of all, you should be sure that you’re buying shoes with welted soles, not glued soles, so their replaceable.  That means no $60 dress shoes for you (unless they’re on sale).

But there is something else you can do.  For about $2, your cobbler can add heel and toe protectors to the soles of your shoes.  They’re nailed in at the outside of the back of the heel and at the toe - the two places where your foot hits the pavement hardest.  These pieces of hard plastic take a beating so your soles don’t have to, and they can be replaced whenever they need to be for another five bucks or so.

One word of warning: they do make a little bit of clickety-clack if you’re a clickety-clack walker.  We like to think of that as our “portentous approach” sound.  Because we’re bad-asses.

Putting these on the toe wouldn’t help the sole. For that you need the leather sole with the rubber grip in the middle of them. If you take that approach, never wear them to an event where you might have to dance. You’ll sprain your knee trying to spin.

  1. talkingoutofturn reblogged this from putthison and added:
    portentous approach.
  2. notdickless reblogged this from putthison and added:
    toe wouldn’t help...sole. For that you need...leather sole...
  3. ja-ausdenbergen reblogged this from putthison and added:
    these suckers are...my fantastic pair...franco sarto...
  4. putthison posted this