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6th October 12, 01:20 PM
#1
making tartan shoes
Hey lads (and lasses)
Have any of you ever heard of covering a pair of ballet flats in tartan? I want to wear ballet flats when I get married and I'd love my shoes to match the tartan ties that the groomsmen will wear. Is this something that I could pay any of the kiltmakers to do? Or the DIY gurus? Or could do it myself?
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6th October 12, 03:11 PM
#2
Dont see why you couldnt do it yourself. Google images shoes quite a few flats that are tartan. Might take a bit of hand work but sure would be fun. Of course photos will be the only proof you did it.
Last edited by brewerpaul; 6th October 12 at 03:14 PM.
"Greater understanding properly leads to an increasing sense of responsibility, and not to arrogance."
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6th October 12, 08:08 PM
#3
yeah but Im scared to make a fat mess out of them
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6th October 12, 08:37 PM
#4
what tartan are you looking to use?
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7th October 12, 09:51 AM
#5
Try it with some plaid fabric of similar weight to your eventual tartan. Mess around until you are satisfied with results, then use that as the pattern for your final.
I assume you are looking to cover existing flats with a layer of fabric, not make the shoe from (excuse me) the ground up? Spray adhesive from 3M, available at craft stores, should do the trick for short-term use.
Or you could look at the "tartan" trainers that, I think it was Kinetikat? made using permanent markers! If your tartan is not too complex and involves primary colors (close to standard marker colors) you might give it a trial run on some inexpensive flats, see what you get.
Proudly Duncan [maternal], MacDonald and MacDaniel [paternal].
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7th October 12, 10:50 AM
#6
 Originally Posted by Friday
what tartan are you looking to use?
MacMillan Old Modern
 Originally Posted by sydnie7
Try it with some plaid fabric of similar weight to your eventual tartan. Mess around until you are satisfied with results, then use that as the pattern for your final.
I assume you are looking to cover existing flats with a layer of fabric, not make the shoe from (excuse me) the ground up? Spray adhesive from 3M, available at craft stores, should do the trick for short-term use.
Or you could look at the "tartan" trainers that, I think it was Kinetikat? made using permanent markers! If your tartan is not too complex and involves primary colors (close to standard marker colors) you might give it a trial run on some inexpensive flats, see what you get.
Thanks for the suggestions I want to get MacMillan Old Modern tartan ties for the groomsmen and I found some nice ones on a number of differnet websites. Then I thought maybe I'd wear dark green flats to match my maids but how cute would tartan shoes be? I thought pretty darn cute.
The only thing that would change my mind how how tartan looks with a lace dress. Might be a little too busy. I might just have to stick with plain green shoes.
Last edited by Meggers; 7th October 12 at 10:52 AM.
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7th October 12, 11:09 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by sydnie7
Spray adhesive from 3M, available at craft stores, should do the trick for short-term use.
Sydnie7, correct me if my memory if wrong, but, I remember 3M spray adhesive as having no forgiveness. Once the two surfaces come in contact it is hard to remove or reposition. I would think that an adhesive with a slower drying time might be better. This would give a little time to smooth out any wrinkles and to reposition if necessary.
Because I have it, I would use Tandy Leather's LeatherCraft Cement. Put the cememt on both the shoe and underside of the cloth. Position, smooth out and tape the edges to the sole and the inside of the foot opening. Allow to dry, remove the tape and trim up all edges. Once trimmed I might go back and apply a thin line of cement on all edge and work into the cloth.
If the shoes are relatively inexpensive I might get two pair. One to use as a test and the other incase the test pair did not meet your expectations.
Please post pictures of the process.
PS. I wonder if canvas pumps would work where you could put a line of reinforcing stitches along the edges of the tartan. Since the shoes will be covered in tartan cloth no one would see the base shoe's material.
Edit: - Whatever cement that is used make sure it is flexible after it drys. Something like epoxy will dry hard and crack as you walk and dance the night away.
Last edited by Friday; 7th October 12 at 11:17 AM.
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7th October 12, 12:52 PM
#8
With a Scottish or Irish themed wedding, why not wear ghillies?
http://billyforsyth.co.uk/index.php?main_page=page&id=6
http://www.hullachan.com/IrishDanceShoes.html
The Hullachans especially will be very comfortable.
--Always toward absent lovers love's tide stronger flows.
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8th October 12, 05:51 AM
#9
Friday's advice is solid. I'm actually doing something similar right now... not with shoes, but with gluing tartan fabric to leather to act as a liner for the inside of a sporran I'm building. The trick is to make sure that the fabric stays glued solidly to the base material while still being flexible. I'm using Barge Cement, which is a very good product for this. But I'll warn you, any cement you use needs to be applied carefully. Most cements of this nature need to sit long enough to get 'tacky' before you press the items together. Especially when using tartan fabric. If you put the tartan fabric on the cement while it's still liquid, it will soak right through the fabric and leave you with a darkened blob showing through. And when it hardens, it will turn yellowish. So it's very important to make sure that the cement is in the perfect state when the fabric is applied. And I'm thinking this would be very difficult on a complex shape like a shoe.
The other problematic issue is trimming the fabric and avoiding fraying at the edges. On my sporran project, I am able to lay my flat pieces of leather on the table to cement the tartan fabric, then I trim the fabric carefully around the leather with scissors and apply Edge Kote to both the leather and the fabric to help reduce fraying. But on a shoe where you'd have to trim the fabric with an Xacto knife or some other awkward tool around the sole, you'll undoubtedly have fraying issues. I honestly don't have any advice on how to trim it and seal the edge of the fabric that will look nice.
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8th October 12, 07:28 AM
#10
 Originally Posted by Tobus
But on a shoe where you'd have to trim the fabric with an Xacto knife or some other awkward tool around the sole, you'll undoubtedly have fraying issues. I honestly don't have any advice on how to trim it and seal the edge of the fabric that will look nice.
Thought of the day.
- Take masking tape and cover the shoe.
- Trim the tape to make a pattern, split the pattern along the back seam.
- Use the pattern to cut out a piece of tartan fabric.
The edge of the fabric could be fray checked by sewing a very thin piece of bind tape to the edges, ribbon folded in half might work for the binding tape. I may also be possible to simply stitch around the edge of the fabric to delay fraying until the glue has set.
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