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Posted

I finished my new boots a couple of weeks agocool.gif, and I finally got around to posting them on here! They are 18" kidskin tops with 6 rows of stitching, buffalo vamps, and some REALLY underslung heels!

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Posted

Wow! those are very nice.

A teacher pointed at me with a ruler and said "At the end of this ruler is an idiot." I got detention when I asked "Which end?"

Posted

The boots look very nice!

I have a cowboy boot question for you. Why do some of them (like yours, but I have seen some other makers do this) have the rear of the heal tip in at such a radical angle? It seems to me that in doing this it makes it much more likely that you will slip or twist your ankle since the heal of your foot is far less suported. They seem to have more the apearance of a female high heal instead of a male work shoe. I am not critisizing you, it seems to be a common design style, just do not understand. This is coming from someone who has a really messed up leg, I could never wear a boot that has so little rear support in the heal area.

Aaron

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Posted

The boots look very nice!

I have a cowboy boot question for you. Why do some of them (like yours, but I have seen some other makers do this) have the rear of the heal tip in at such a radical angle? It seems to me that in doing this it makes it much more likely that you will slip or twist your ankle since the heal of your foot is far less suported. They seem to have more the apearance of a female high heal instead of a male work shoe. I am not critisizing you, it seems to be a common design style, just do not understand. This is coming from someone who has a really messed up leg, I could never wear a boot that has so little rear support in the heal area.

Aaron

Thanks Aaron!

Well, the beauty of custom boots is that you can order whatever you want! These are "riding heels" which basically means that you are right, they aren't that great to walk on, but you get used to them. I'm not too sure how the style was invented, but style is the reason I made them this way, I think they look cool, and when you are riding a horse you can't feel the difference. If you were going to do lots of walking it would be a lot better to put a larger diameter heel cap, which would make the heel more vertical vs. the "underslung" look these ones have.

They don't call 'em "ankle breakers" for nothing!

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Posted (edited)

The style is reminiscent of what I saw out west as a youth. My family was in the cattle business and everyone wore boots (in fact everyone I knew wore boots). As my granddad told me once the heel was designed so your foot would not get caught in a stirrup in the event you were bucked off, or the horse fell (praire dog hole)… . Double or single pegged shank? You just do not see many bootslike this anymore…. They are WAY cool.

DBP

Edited by DoubleBarP
Posted

I understand the idea of wearing a high heal so that the heal has a harder time going past the stirup. I was/am questioning the inswept rear of the heal.

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Posted

I finished my new boots a couple of weeks agocool.gif, and I finally got around to posting them on here! They are 18" kidskin tops with 6 rows of stitching, buffalo vamps, and some REALLY underslung heels!

Pretty darned good looking job, I'd say. Obviously not just your second time around boots. Looks like a good job on the outsole stitcher too.

Regarding the underslung heel, while there is no official ratio, the higher the heel, the more underslung the heels needs to be just to walk without flapping every step. I've changed out lots of heels with this shortcoming. Frye Boots in the 70's were the worst.

The brain knows where your heel ends, and the taper makes it possible to contact the ground with each step in this line, with the heel tapered at the back.

Stability comes form the heel base coming straight down on the sides.

Back to the bench,

Paul

"When you finally get your wings, don't complain about the wind in your face."

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Posted

Yea, I have heard that higher heels help keep your foot from going through the stirrup, I have never had it happen, (knock on wood) so it must be true! Yes, they are double pegged along the shank, the only nails in the whole boots are in the heel bases, and the shanks are big "60 common" nails.

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Posted

I like them. Very macho looking!

Are the shafts large enough to get pants into?

I see you have a spur shelf also.

I wear spurs when I ride, and I hate it when I find a boot that I like but it doesn't have a spur shelf.

Very nice job.

Joel

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Posted

Electrathon:

The underslung heal is designed served a couple functions. They were designed to keep the foot in the stirrup but not allow the foot to slip too far into the stirrup. This kept the cowboy from getting hung up and dragged by a horse if he got bucked off. (I was taught to keep the stirrup just where the ball of the foot and the arch meet... and my heals down for this very reason.)

It also allows the cowboy to dig in his heals into the dirt to wrangle a stubborn animal.

There is some pretty good history at this site... if you want to read more

http://www.cowboyboots.com/history.html

A teacher pointed at me with a ruler and said "At the end of this ruler is an idiot." I got detention when I asked "Which end?"

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