I have come round once again, now that the pavements are slowly drying, to the wearing of a hefty shoe: on Saturday, whilst out and about in the borderlands of Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, Florsheim Imperial PTBs, bought some dozen years ago for about £40 from one of our American cousins (TRS, avert your eyes). Very satisfying and every bit as good as my Jarman cordovan wingtips (newly renovated). I've just bought another pair of Jarman - smooths this time - and am casting my eyes over a pair of AE split-toe.
Your own personal preferences?
In the last few weeks I've been wearing pebble grained, mid mustard brown Alfred Sargent, Made in England, Stepney 'American Brogues' with a Dainite sole. They are a heavy shoe, but really good to walk in. I wish they were burgundy and I've tried to tone the colour down, with limited success. I don't have any smooths at the moment.
Last edited by RobbieB (2022-05-31 13:27:54)
One of my favorite pairs of shoes are my PTB’s, Florsheim Imperials in burgundy shell, JFM tried to pinch them but they were too big for him - I took it as high praise. I did have a pair of Imperial Long-wings in the same leather until fairly recently but I’d neglected them and they were unrecoverable, definitely on my list to replace like-for-like though, although this time round I’ll aim to save for either the Macneils or the Alden equivalent. Still got a pair of black Florsheim long-wings. Funny how you guys are starting to wear yours now, I think of them as an autumn and winter shoe, the weight of the shoe matching nicely the much-desired donegal tweed trees, jumbo cord etc etc. This time of year I’m taking advantage of the weather to wear my suede stuff, the couple of pairs of espadrilles I have and waiting for the Alden (for Brooks) LHS I bought to show up. I’ve also taken to wearing my paraboot micheals sockless - perhaps they’re a year round shoe?
Sockless Paraboot. Radical. Never seen this done. Is this a good thing? I admit I'm tempted.
I was a big fan of the smooths as a young bloke, the less decoration on a shoe the better! Wingtips used to be something l loathed and thought old fashioned and ugly. Eventually l grew to love all types of brogues, but disliked spectator shoes and tassel loafers. Over time my tastes matured and l grew to love both types of shoes. These days l love all the shoe styles except for the jodphur boot. I don't even mind the ghillies brogue.
Loving and owning most of the styles is liberating....you have the best of all worlds. Shoos is an adventure because you progress in your appreciation of styles as you get older, so your shoo journey is rich and varied.
AFS talks about getting into hefty shoes
This thinking can lead to great adventures. Yes, the fat ones (hefty shoes aka `the fat boys') also have their place. It is cold in Oz and l have a pair of fat ones on today.
Winter = the fat boys
Nice weather = smart elegant shoes (the thin boys).
I have too many fat boys to count in my cupboard.
I fancy I went sockless with the black Paraboot loafers I had back in 2007 or 2008. What were they called? Yuma? I know they had a squeaky sole and that students complained in the examination hall. I fancied they made me look a little like Mister Chet.
The real drawback with sockless is judging how far you can travel without rubbing and bleeding. I tried this with loafers and boat shoes on more than one occasion and bled badly.
@TRS I’d not attempt to do it with my Avignon but the Micheal being such a casual shoe, I think it’s doable. Worn yesterday (no socks!) with OG fatigues and the loudest of my madras shirts (Cool-out blue by Jakes) and a pair of aviators, very what JS used to refer to as Jivy-Ivy I hope. I call it my Good Morning Vietnam look.
PTB ‘smooths’ look better with a smart suit than brogues which are a country shoe by origin. But the ornamentation on a nicely polished pair of wingtips stands out and can even be noticed and appreciated by the most shoe un-conscious person.
I really must get some wear out of my wingtips but, apart from loafers in the summer, I rarely wear leather sole shoes now. They’re dangerous in the wet and the idea of falling over appeals less as brittle bones come over the age horizon. There’s also the comfort issue, diehard calceamentalists will claim that leather soles are more comfortable than rubber, oh really? Well carry on and when winter comes I’ll keep reaching for my Paraboots. I’ve tried Dianite soles and while they look good and grip well, if anything they are more unforgiving than leather.
AFS - ‘The real drawback with sockless is judging how far you can travel without rubbing and bleeding. I tried this with loafers and boat shoes on more than one occasion and bled badly.’
Have you tried so called invisible socks? You have a pair of socks on but to the onlooker you maintain a sockless pose. The chief problem is them not staying in place and coming off your foot inside the shoe, which is annoying. I’ve experimented with various makers, M&S used to be good but then they changed the design and now they are useless. Uniqlo seem to have the science right at the moment and the ones I’ve got from them stay in place all day and still work when you’ve washed them several times.
https://www.uniqlo.com/eu/en/product/men-low-cut-socks-447693.html
Woof is absolutely correct in this instance. Great care should be taken for the older man, hence my increasing liking for Astorflex (all hail The Weejun and John Rushton). The hefty shoe with the leather sole has become a dry weather item for me.
I didn’t get where I am today without being correct Reggie.
This time of year I live in boat shoes or mocs of some kind. Easy on, easy off for fishing purposes.
Loafers if I need to be respectable in public.
My favorite fat boys are double-soled Trickers medium brown plain toes.
I can't remember the last time I wore a brogue of any kind. Got plenty to choose from, but they seem increasingly fussy to me.
I can't tell if I am moving into a streamlined, unconscious style or just getting old and lazy. Could be both, I suppose.
You really need secure lacing with heavier shoes. I always the preferred straight lace look but it comes undone too easily. Over under lacing works
https://www.fieggen.com/shoelace/overunderlacing.htm
This chaps army lacing also works well on boots.
@Woof it was AFS whose feet are prone to injury sans socks, not I. My feet fairly well resemble some kind of hoof, I’m prone to callousing at the heel and blister rarely. I paid the price for walking some 30+ km on the day I met you in London however, I had to beg a dish bowl and salt when I reached my hotel!
Tim - duly amended thanks.