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Originally Posted by
Graywolf
From my experience re-enacting - 1) swap shoes each time you where them - they'll even out. 2) These shoes were made for wear on much softer ground then MacAdam or asphalt - Remember those inventions did not exist for roads when these shoes were designed. They are extremely comfortable on grass, etc. Been there done that.
In heat on asphalt /gravel/Macadam they will be killers - be prepared for blisters.
Historians will tell you that even though shoes were straightlasted and might be interchangeable initially, they not only were never intended (by the shoemaker) to be swapped back and forth, they seldom were. Each foot is unique, even on the same body, and each foot wants to create a footbed within the shoe that is unique to itself. Then too, such shoes were intended to form to the individual foot (right or left) and eventually resemble shoes made on paired lasts more closely. Swapping shoes tends to delay, or even prevent entirely, the foot from ever becoming truly comfortable.
Straight lasts came into fashion because of the difficulty of hand carving paired lasts at higher heel heights. And of course the shoemaker only needed one last per size. The basic intent was to make things easier for both the lastmaker and the shoemaker...not the wearer.
DWFII--Traditionalist and Auld Crabbit
In the Highlands of Central Oregon
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