Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 26,263
- Location
- London, UK
Danner look really nice. Much of their collection is a touch too modern for my aesthetic, but they dodo at lest one 'heritage' model which is similar to the Aero Jarrow or a Red Wing Blacksmith, pretty competitive price on the website at GBP199. If I was going to get seriously into hillwalking again, the Mountain range are a very classy, old school and still hugely practical hiking boot.
I still have my Grinders that were my first pair of engineers - £80 back in 2004. Very chunky. A decent boot and the manufacture is really nice on them, though the leather, while nice enough, is not of the quality of my RW / Chippewas /SJC, it's quite clear. Really chunky commando soles on them - not what I prefer aesthetically now, but I go back and forth about keeping them as they are great if the weather turns wet / snow. I like the man-made soles on my Chippewas, but yeah, with a harness leather (with a think rubber overlay) is definitely classier. Sendra look to have a nice reddish-brown option at the minute I will be looking into. Only shame is it would be nice if there was an option of a 7" shaft. I have a pair of Chipps engineers with that shorter shaft, and it makes them a really nice option in warmer weather. Three of four more inches shouldn't make a difference you'd think, but it does to a surprising degree.
I like the contrast with the sole edges not being dyed black. I know that in reality has little to do with quality, but in practice it's a detail I see far more often on higher quality boots for whatever reason. (And a good excuse to own two pairs in black, one with blacked sole edges....
).
TBH, that's why I've avoided them. In the US, last I looked, a pair of Alden Indys were only a little more expensive than a pair of RW Iron Rangers, whereas over here, when you can find them, they tended to be at least GBP100 more (and that was before the value of the pound crashed against the dollar). Without wanting to do Alden down at all - they make great shoes - the only model they do that really sticks out as significantly than what anyone else produces is the Indy. I filled that gap for myself by buying a pair of the Wested "Adventurer" Boots. While I'm sure they're nowhere near as good as the "real" thing, at a quarter of the price they do well. Also hold their own well enough against my RWs and Lennons. Not as ****** proof I'm sure as the Lennons especially, but they have had a lot of wear and survived well. Slightly lighter weight, a touch dressier. TBH, I bought them not having especially high expectations, but I've been pleasantly surprised: for the money (around GBP100) they're a bargain. I would expect them to be double the price if they were made in the UK - of course, they are manufacture in China were relative labour costs are lower, and I should think the fact that (for the obvious reason) there's only one model, not half a dozen colours being offered, helps them keep the unit price down.
In terms of which jacket I wear my Westeds with, it's mostly a tweed blazer. I find them wonderful for work, especially on teaching days when I can be on my feet for two or three hours at a time during classes. I like to work the room when I teach, so I cover a lot of ground in that time!
Sendra is the maker you need to go with, believe me. It's a no brainer. Best boot, best value. And by best I mean seriously good boot by any possible standard! Plus they have some mean brown hide, too.
Only thing Grinders' got goin' on for themselves are the shape of their boot and that's about it - Plus at the end of the day, the money you'd save doesn't justify ****py stitching (even though the boots themselves are tough and seem like they'd last a good while). Sendras are what, some 100 Euros more but the make is infinitely better, leather is nicer and the overall impression is that you got a premium Harness boot.
Current Frye's are okay, I guess, but rubber sole shouldn't even be an option for anyone who likes boots. I'd rather go with NewRock in that case.
Vintage Frye, on the other hand. . .
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I still have my Grinders that were my first pair of engineers - £80 back in 2004. Very chunky. A decent boot and the manufacture is really nice on them, though the leather, while nice enough, is not of the quality of my RW / Chippewas /SJC, it's quite clear. Really chunky commando soles on them - not what I prefer aesthetically now, but I go back and forth about keeping them as they are great if the weather turns wet / snow. I like the man-made soles on my Chippewas, but yeah, with a harness leather (with a think rubber overlay) is definitely classier. Sendra look to have a nice reddish-brown option at the minute I will be looking into. Only shame is it would be nice if there was an option of a 7" shaft. I have a pair of Chipps engineers with that shorter shaft, and it makes them a really nice option in warmer weather. Three of four more inches shouldn't make a difference you'd think, but it does to a surprising degree.
Those Wolverine’s look good with a different heel. That’s been the one thing that has me looking at White’s semi-dress.
I like the contrast with the sole edges not being dyed black. I know that in reality has little to do with quality, but in practice it's a detail I see far more often on higher quality boots for whatever reason. (And a good excuse to own two pairs in black, one with blacked sole edges....
Where do you guys in Europe buy Alden? They seem virtually unobtainable outside of the US as US shops can’t ship them abroad. Has anyone ever gone down the proxy route?
TBH, that's why I've avoided them. In the US, last I looked, a pair of Alden Indys were only a little more expensive than a pair of RW Iron Rangers, whereas over here, when you can find them, they tended to be at least GBP100 more (and that was before the value of the pound crashed against the dollar). Without wanting to do Alden down at all - they make great shoes - the only model they do that really sticks out as significantly than what anyone else produces is the Indy. I filled that gap for myself by buying a pair of the Wested "Adventurer" Boots. While I'm sure they're nowhere near as good as the "real" thing, at a quarter of the price they do well. Also hold their own well enough against my RWs and Lennons. Not as ****** proof I'm sure as the Lennons especially, but they have had a lot of wear and survived well. Slightly lighter weight, a touch dressier. TBH, I bought them not having especially high expectations, but I've been pleasantly surprised: for the money (around GBP100) they're a bargain. I would expect them to be double the price if they were made in the UK - of course, they are manufacture in China were relative labour costs are lower, and I should think the fact that (for the obvious reason) there's only one model, not half a dozen colours being offered, helps them keep the unit price down.
In terms of which jacket I wear my Westeds with, it's mostly a tweed blazer. I find them wonderful for work, especially on teaching days when I can be on my feet for two or three hours at a time during classes. I like to work the room when I teach, so I cover a lot of ground in that time!



