The Parisian Gentleman has had a bad experience - http://parisiangentleman.co.uk/2011/12/27/don’t-sing-in-the-rain-in-your-berlutis/
"an unquestionable drop in the general product quality despite a dramatic price increase.
In the last few years, this double and worrisome turn has been compounded by a problem that tends to worsen and that all Berluti owners have sadly experienced at some point. The shoes are extremely fragile and, most importantly, tend to take in water under the slightest rain (I am not talking about downpours, but a slightly damp ground).
Recently, friends told me that they had adapted a widespread French saying to reflect the water vs. Berluti paradigm. As soon as the weather lets the slightest spit, they say that “this is no weather to go out in your Berlutis”.
Having myself had to deal with the horrendous feeling of soaking my feet in 1,500 euros shoes, I wonder what explains Berluti’s lack of action to resolve a recurrent problem that is causing a number of amateurs (including some that are deeply attached to the label) to find dry ground somewhere else."
The saddest in this is the spineless explanation provided by shop salesmen (including on Saint-Germain). They explain, with great aplomb, that this is due to the exceptional quality of untreated leather before the customized patina. This is not a waterproof explanation by any stretch of the imagination for a problem probably brought on by the Blake assembly and that has nothing to do with leather…
Yet again, I continue to very much respect Berluti’s work and its impact in the appreciation of masculine shoe. But frankly, such an obvious drop in quality and reliability is simply incomprehensible."
IIRC, they are now made in China...
Last edited by Marc Grayson (2012-01-03 21:13:04)
Says a lot for Blake stitching vs Goodyear or Norvegese etc.
I've seen those Berlutis before, in my nightmares of Berlusconi bunga-bunga land. Absolutely, horrid.
You don't need to experiment in inclement weather, those shoes are unfit for anything other than effete dandyesque activities. You can tell by a photograph alone they are ornate delicate creatures that ain't going to cut the mustard in anything other than a Mediterranean summer. The pyrrhic victory of style over substance.
They are the antithesis of an English bench made shoe: in the style, the substance and quality behind it.
As an expatriate Englishman, I find those shoes offensive.
Last edited by The_Shooman (2012-01-04 00:50:27)
I don't expect the soles of leather shoes to be waterproof in the rain and for that reason I never wear them when it's wet outside.
The problems I have with Berluti (which are defects not common in other shoes) are that (i)water causes the upper surface to wrinkle and (ii) the patina is not permanent and wears away when the shoes are cleaned and polished.