What you should look out for in a shoe
So I have been thinking about what makes a shoe undeniably good. Something that maybe you cannot see but you can feel. And of course, the answer is fit. Now, this is not to be confused with fitting you well (personally) but ‘good’ in the sense that the last has actual shape. The last has contour. It is not a generic blob intended to fit everyone. And this will not be easily explained or understood until you actually feel it. Trust me. I know.
I remember when I was in London, working inside of Gieves & Hawkes and I was starting to get into suits. I had some RTW ones which fit well (after good tailoring/altering). I have MTM ones that fit even better. I remember thinking to myself, ‘How can bespoke get better than MTM?’ So my good friend, Lee Webb, the best cutter I know offered to make me a suit at the cost of production which just meant the cloth/materials and any outside work that he does not do i.e. sewing it all together. I remember vividly how it felt when I first put on that suit. How the trousers hugged my thighs the right way and did not buckle by my messed up “soccer” knees. How the sleeves hugged my armpit area without restricting movement. How the jacket looked like a million bucks. It was a learning point about what quality gets you: good and/or great fit.
Shoes are the same as suits to a degree. As you go up the echelons of price in footwear, one of the things you will notice, or rather feel, is a significant difference in how the shoes fit or hug your feet. As I touched on in the post yesterday, the feet are complex and have many varying factors that make it essential to create a good fit. Good shoemakers know this and attempt to make lasts that move to those lines of the foot in order to create a fit that ‘belongs’ rather than just being ‘there.’ And what I mean by that is anyone can stick their feet into cheap, generic shoes. The fit will be crap but the purpose of that cheap shoe is mass production. And in order to sell mass production, everyone (or nearly) has to be able to fit into that shoe. The fit is just ‘there.’ A fit that belongs, hugs your feet in all of the right places. You feel supported in that shoe. It feels good. And despite being hard leather, you can walk all day on concrete in them. And that is a good shoe.
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