Show us your new shoes (Vol 2)

Show us your new shoes (Vol 2)

Author
Discussion

apotek

647 posts

186 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
FreeLitres said:
Cheaney just emailed me to announce their new models for spring.

Anyone Alpha enough to get away with these?




Those trousers and the sandals were me 1980 , not quite that thin

Blown2CV

28,855 posts

204 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
So said:
I've cleaned my wife's Dubarry boots and used the Dubarry leather cream. But is has left white residue in the creases and they look rubbish. I have previously used a soft brush to get it out, but it polishes them - which is not the original appearance.

Any ideas chaps please?
saphir renovatir and try again?

So

26,295 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
Blown2CV said:
So said:
I've cleaned my wife's Dubarry boots and used the Dubarry leather cream. But is has left white residue in the creases and they look rubbish. I have previously used a soft brush to get it out, but it polishes them - which is not the original appearance.

Any ideas chaps please?
saphir renovatir and try again?
Maybe.

I've emailed Dubarry and asked them. Their boots, their cream. Let's see what they say.

I think it is a case of white unctuous cream not soaking fully into the leather. I imagine that if I wipe them down with whatever the base of the cream is (an oil?) it will remove the surplus.


Blown2CV

28,855 posts

204 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
So said:
Blown2CV said:
So said:
I've cleaned my wife's Dubarry boots and used the Dubarry leather cream. But is has left white residue in the creases and they look rubbish. I have previously used a soft brush to get it out, but it polishes them - which is not the original appearance.

Any ideas chaps please?
saphir renovatir and try again?
Maybe.

I've emailed Dubarry and asked them. Their boots, their cream. Let's see what they say.

I think it is a case of white unctuous cream not soaking fully into the leather. I imagine that if I wipe them down with whatever the base of the cream is (an oil?) it will remove the surplus.
is it like a waxed finish or something?

LordGrover

33,546 posts

213 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
Still have my Cheaney, Church, Loake, etc. for when the occasion suits, but have recently switched to more comfortable shoes for 90% of the time.
I've found Tadeevo and Vivo very good, and my feet are thanking me.

Won't be popular with many as they look a bit odd, but once you get used to them it's hard to go back to conventional style shoes.



craigjm

17,959 posts

201 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
So said:
I've cleaned my wife's Dubarry boots and used the Dubarry leather cream. But is has left white residue in the creases and they look rubbish. I have previously used a soft brush to get it out, but it polishes them - which is not the original appearance.

Any ideas chaps please?
Destroy them and claim ignorance before the wife finds out and removes marital privileges

So

26,295 posts

223 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
Blown2CV said:
So said:
Blown2CV said:
So said:
I've cleaned my wife's Dubarry boots and used the Dubarry leather cream. But is has left white residue in the creases and they look rubbish. I have previously used a soft brush to get it out, but it polishes them - which is not the original appearance.

Any ideas chaps please?
saphir renovatir and try again?
Maybe.

I've emailed Dubarry and asked them. Their boots, their cream. Let's see what they say.

I think it is a case of white unctuous cream not soaking fully into the leather. I imagine that if I wipe them down with whatever the base of the cream is (an oil?) it will remove the surplus.
is it like a waxed finish or something?
No, the original finish is a smooth leather. It isn't waxy, nor is it polished. The cream looks and smells a lot like any other shoe cream to be honest.




rsbmw

3,464 posts

106 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
LordGrover said:
Still have my Cheaney, Church, Loake, etc. for when the occasion suits, but have recently switched to more comfortable shoes for 90% of the time.
I've found Tadeevo and Vivo very good, and my feet are thanking me.

Won't be popular with many as they look a bit odd, but once you get used to them it's hard to go back to conventional style shoes.


For when you’ve completely given up on life!

Goaty Bill 2

3,414 posts

120 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
LordGrover said:
Still have my Cheaney, Church, Loake, etc. for when the occasion suits, but have recently switched to more comfortable shoes for 90% of the time.
I've found Tadeevo and Vivo very good, and my feet are thanking me.

Won't be popular with many as they look a bit odd, but once you get used to them it's hard to go back to conventional style shoes.


You are presenting us with an example of the fine art of British understatement?


Blown2CV

28,855 posts

204 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
rsbmw said:
LordGrover said:
Still have my Cheaney, Church, Loake, etc. for when the occasion suits, but have recently switched to more comfortable shoes for 90% of the time.
I've found Tadeevo and Vivo very good, and my feet are thanking me.

Won't be popular with many as they look a bit odd, but once you get used to them it's hard to go back to conventional style shoes.


For when you’ve completely given up on life!
yep

Thankyou4calling

10,607 posts

174 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
I presume this is a joke?

g3org3y

20,639 posts

192 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
Goaty Bill 2 said:
You are presenting us with an example of the fine art of British understatement?
hehe


FreeLitres

6,049 posts

178 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
It may be a trick of the light, but do those plimsoles have a fiddleback waist?

Best of both worlds?

CharlesdeGaulle

26,297 posts

181 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
FreeLitres said:
It may be a trick of the light, but do those plimsoles have a fiddleback waist?
I think you're right, but the even number of eyelets makes them unwearable in any truly formal setting.

g3org3y

20,639 posts

192 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
CharlesdeGaulle said:
FreeLitres said:
It may be a trick of the light, but do those plimsoles have a fiddleback waist?
I think you're right, but the even number of eyelets makes them unwearable in any truly formal setting.
yes

Inductionroar for the sake of your health, avert your eyes.

anonymous-user

55 months

Tuesday 12th March 2019
quotequote all
Lordgrover those are just horrible shoes.

Why don’t we all agree to delete the quotes and you throw them out and we’ll all pretend this never happened.

Do you still like music and beautiful women and singing? Can you still smile or get an erection?

Those shoes are so sad, they symbolise the slow ebbing of your human spirit. It’s like watching an old ship rust away or a once great building fall into disrepair and become a squat for druggies and rank old dirty prostitutes.

They are utterly utterly miserable.

So

26,295 posts

223 months

Wednesday 13th March 2019
quotequote all
El stovey said:
Lordgrover those are just horrible shoes.

Why don’t we all agree to delete the quotes and you throw them out and we’ll all pretend this never happened.

Do you still like music and beautiful women and singing? Can you still smile or get an erection?

Those shoes are so sad, they symbolise the slow ebbing of your human spirit. It’s like watching an old ship rust away or a once great building fall into disrepair and become a squat for druggies and rank old dirty prostitutes.

They are utterly utterly miserable.
laugh

g3org3y

20,639 posts

192 months

Wednesday 13th March 2019
quotequote all
So said:
El stovey said:
Lordgrover those are just horrible shoes.

Why don’t we all agree to delete the quotes and you throw them out and we’ll all pretend this never happened.

Do you still like music and beautiful women and singing? Can you still smile or get an erection?

Those shoes are so sad, they symbolise the slow ebbing of your human spirit. It’s like watching an old ship rust away or a once great building fall into disrepair and become a squat for druggies and rank old dirty prostitutes.

They are utterly utterly miserable.
laugh
rofl

Genuinely beautiful summary.

rsbmw

3,464 posts

106 months

Wednesday 13th March 2019
quotequote all
I just clicked one of the links. They charge £100 for those eek

WinstonWolf

72,857 posts

240 months

Wednesday 13th March 2019
quotequote all
g3org3y said:
So said:
El stovey said:
Lordgrover those are just horrible shoes.

Why don’t we all agree to delete the quotes and you throw them out and we’ll all pretend this never happened.

Do you still like music and beautiful women and singing? Can you still smile or get an erection?

Those shoes are so sad, they symbolise the slow ebbing of your human spirit. It’s like watching an old ship rust away or a once great building fall into disrepair and become a squat for druggies and rank old dirty prostitutes.

They are utterly utterly miserable.
laugh
rofl

Genuinely beautiful summary.
I had to wear medical shoes for a year or two when I was young. They looked remarkably like those monstrosities.