Fifty150
Call Me a Cab
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Here are a few videos of the resole on crepe sole shoes.
I can now see the grid pattern of the air cells inside of the heel. I wonder if that means I'm getting close to wearing them out.
John Lofgren makes a Dessert Boot as well, A bit more expensive then Clarks.. at $500.. But the quality and workmanship are tops.
https://johnlofgren.com/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIn-fX6uX86QIVA3iGCh0FwgDNEAAYASAAEgKRi_D_BwE
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They have a few colors ( sand, Navy Rust & Green)
I like this green
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a pair of Bushacre 3s
Here's what I don't like. And it's only my problem, since I like to wear the shoes without socks. My bare feet do not like the footbed. The lasting board that the shoe is sewn on to do not feel so good. Not a problem if you wear socks.
If I find the right cobbler to do it, it would be great to have the uppers sewn onto a piece of veg tan leather, then resoled with a wedge sole. I have come to really like the Vibram wedge soles that came on my Allen Edmonds Park City boots.
the impression of the two pairs I have is that the uppers are of sufficient quality
As a leatherworker, I do appreciate a shoe that has a sole actually stitched on, but in reality, shoe uppers are normally stitched to a leather last which is then glued to the sole. properly glued sole is just fine. Hot Hide glue has held the soles on mankinds shoes since the 1400's. As mentioned, lots of modern "stitched" shoes are actually just a stitched decorative strip glued on.I wore Clark’s for years, the last pair I bought had the crepe soles, they were junk. The soles were only glued on. There was a stitch line around the sole but it was just for show, didn’t actually have any structural purpose. I returned them when the sole separated, the shoe store said it was pretty common.
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