- Messages
- 3,809
- Location
- Edinburgh Scotland
I have a couple of pairsI have two pairs of these.
And two pairs of these, and some old ones, that's the only shoes I have these days.
23 year old Doc's....wonderful. Used to love my boots. Had to have them resoled many times?A pair of NPS brogues which are simply wonderful for what I paid (£90). Far cheaper than the Clarks equivalent and much superior
Barker cherry red Gibsons - Again a sale bargain
A pair of Joseph Cheaney black Gibsons - A steal at £6 from a charity shop
A pair of Berwick shoes brown country Gibsons - Sale items
A pair of 23 year old Doc Martens
A pair of Clarks boots which are supremely comfortable and just go on and on
2 pairs of Asics trainers which is the only brand I will buy on the trainer front
Out of the lot? The NPS brogues
View attachment 91407
I have quite a few Cheaney's. Mostly sale items, but a couple of seconds.Those Cheaneys were a steal, there is a Cheaneys shop behind Lloyds of London, the shoes in the window were unpriced, I went in and there was nothing below £350 and that was 10 years ago.
There is a YouTube channel that takes leather shoes apart and rebuilds them, you really see where your money goes on better shoes when you see them taken apart.
I was googling shoes early this morning. M&S now do suedette shoes. Other stores such as Schuh do PU leather. I was surprised that Deichmann advertised real leather shoes a few years ago. I didn't realise fake leather and suede were a thing in shoes then...Shoes are where it's at. Have many, many fine examples; Berluti (Classic Norwegian triple sole), Edward Green (Falkirk brogues in Chestnut, probably over 20 years' old), RM Williams (Chelsea Boots, one originally in kip brown but now with a highly polished patina, one in Dress Black leather), Alfred Sargent (Green suede Chukka Boots, one of only three ever made), many pairs of Cheaneys (Chukka boots in suede and embossed leather, Brogues, Cordoven, Suede Monks etc); then some more casual Clarks: Chelsea & Desert Boots and Fin's (no longer in existence) suede loafers in five different colours.
It does pain me that one day these will all probably be thrown away, as no one will appreciate their beauty and of course value. One of my gripes is that it has all now become a throwaway society; several pairs of my shoes are 20 or so years old and have been repaired several times and still look good and wear well, even though I need to either return them to the original manufacturers or send them to London to get them properly attended to. You simply cannot hand them to anyone unknown or a "Heel type bar etc" as they will totally ruin them by shaving off the welt etc, etc. There are really very very few skilled craftsmen who are now capable of carrying out good shoe repairs on quality shoes.
Needless to state, I won't be buying or needing any more!
Pleather!I was googling shoes early this morning. M&S now do suedette shoes. Other stores such as Schuh do PU leather. I was surprised that Deichmann advertised real leather shoes a few years ago. I didn't realise fake leather and suede were a thing in shoes then...
23 year old Doc's....wonderful. Used to love my boots. Had to have them resoled many times?
Shoes are where it's at. Have many, many fine examples; Berluti (Classic Norwegian triple sole), Edward Green (Falkirk brogues in Chestnut, probably over 20 years' old), RM Williams (Chelsea Boots, one originally in kip brown but now with a highly polished patina, one in Dress Black leather), Alfred Sargent (Green suede Chukka Boots, one of only three ever made), many pairs of Cheaneys (Chukka boots in suede and embossed leather, Brogues, Cordoven, Suede Monks etc); then some more casual Clarks: Chelsea & Desert Boots and Fin's (no longer in existence) suede loafers in five different colours.
It does pain me that one day these will all probably be thrown away, as no one will appreciate their beauty and of course value. One of my gripes is that it has all now become a throwaway society; several pairs of my shoes are 20 or so years old and have been repaired several times and still look good and wear well, even though I need to either return them to the original manufacturers or send them to London to get them properly attended to. You simply cannot hand them to anyone unknown or a "Heel type bar etc" as they will totally ruin them by shaving off the welt etc, etc. There are really very very few skilled craftsmen who are now capable of carrying out good shoe repairs on quality shoes.
Needless to state, I won't be buying or needing any more!
They are few and far between; look after them, because before long they unfortunately will no longer be there. Yes, the bespoke shoemakers in London for the ultra rich will obviously survive, but the craftsmen, plying their trade for the very few will not.There is a shop in Doncaster and I must say their renovation service is first class.
23 year old Doc's....wonderful. Used to love my boots. Had to have them resoled many times?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?