• @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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    591 year ago

    Hottest Desserts

    These boots were made for walkin’

    And that’s just what they’ll do.

    One of these days, these boots are gonna creme pate a choux

  • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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    591 year ago

    Saw a youtube short the other day about the differences between legit air Jordans and a pair of $40 knockoffs from some different factory in China, and they were listing things like how the netting is horizontal instead of 45°, and the little inch tall cartoon of a guy has the wrong number of fingers, and ended the video saying something like “so yeah, it’s really not worth it to buy cheap knockoffs, you should really spend the extra money to get the real thing”

    I wear 6e wide shoes. It kind of infuriates me that people spend more than I spend on shoes, not to have nice shoes to wear, but just to have them. I gotta grind my $130 boots to dust every 6 months, and these mfs are spending that much just to show them off. I hate sneakerheads dude it’s such a stupid hobby

    • @Sunfoil@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      Please look into Nicks or Whites or traditional bootmakers. They will give you indestructible boots in all of the wide sizes. More expensive upfront but you can give them to your grandchildren if you do minimal care and pay the $50 to have them resoled as needed.

    • @Basil
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      61 year ago

      They’re pretty expensive, but have you ever tried Thorogood boots?

  • Chemical Wonka
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    441 year ago

    Not with a Dr.Martens boot, that is more a fashion icon than a daily boot properly

    • @Rubanski@lemm.ee
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      161 year ago

      I forgot the brand name that is now operating in old DrMartens boot factories in GB. Those are apparently good

          • @Sylvartas@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            If you’re talking about the “good” Dr Martens I think you’re right. Last time I checked Solovair were the ones actually making the expensive “made in UK” Martens, and their own brand were slightly less pricy.

            The vast majority of the new Martens you can find are cheaply made in Asia and are not very expensive though

        • pi3r8
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          21 year ago

          They are amazing! And buying a pair will last years so will average out in your favour.

    • @hOrni@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      Same with Timberland. I have a pair that I bought in a thrift shop and it’s going on strong for more than a decade. Bought a new pair and it gave up after 6 years. For this year I’m trying out some obscure maker from my country. They seem good so far, and cost less then a half of a new pair of Timberlands.

    • @CADmonkey@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      I have a pair of Doc Martens work boots that have been amazing. They’re metatarsal guard steeltoe boots that I got in 2017, although the soles are cracking on them.

  • Linkyu
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    431 year ago

    Oh what a timing! I actually just got my new pair fitted last week.

    Over 10 years ago I got myself some Magnum desert ranger boots (y’know, back when they were still decent), and I finally had to change them this year. The leather was still… alright but everything else was breaking apart bad, so I figured I’d finally replace them.

    But like! Magnum is a shit brand now, and all the competitors available here aren’t much better, and the only real options for boots in that style are just, super expensive, so at this point I just went to a cobbler to simply remake the same shoes but with better materials and nice colors.

    I think they turned out great!

      • Linkyu
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        111 year ago

        Yeah!

        Well, technically the design of the pattern was made by Magnum in early 2010s (it’s the old spyder model), but the construction of this pair specifically is all from scratch, tailored to my feet and to my orthopedic insoles.

  • rivvvver
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    351 year ago

    hate it when someone walks over my hottest desserts :(

  • Franzia
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    311 year ago

    Both are fine by me ngl. Neither of these shoes are designer btw.

    • @FlickOfTheBean@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      I mistook the boots as docs and the shoes are Nike… I’m layman level though, and there does appear to be a difference between designer and branding that I don’t fully understand… Though it appears to be even though you may recognize the brand, the brand itself may not be designer (is that about right? You obviously know more than me, so feel free to tell me I’m wrong!)

      • Justin
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        1 year ago

        doc Martins are kinda crap quality these days tbh. Go with Red Wing or other midrange gy welt boot. Check out Rose Anvil on YouTube for quality boot reviews.

        • @FlickOfTheBean@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          For sure, they’re just the first thing that comes to mind when I see a generic looking boot lol thanks for the tips! Definitely checking out rose anvil tonight!

          • Justin
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            11 year ago

            Yeah, his content has so much detail, I love it.

      • Franzia
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        41 year ago

        I dont recognize the brand, but those boots are a common design. If built with even the worst leather, they will tackle anything and last years. (Lifetime, only if its top notch).

        In my mind, and I dont own any, designer shoes are literally designer. Not mass market. Inside the shoe it’s gonna say not only the designer’s name but the number of this item in the batch, because they are handmade. Think runway, red carpet, etc.

        Department store brands, led by a designer and their assistants, are a wonderful value but not the same thing.

  • rumschlumpel
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    271 year ago

    Nike is not a designer brand, and something like “creasing” is only an issue if you’re a sneakerhead.

  • pelya
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    171 year ago

    Shoes on the left will be 3x more expensive and will give your legs blisters.

    • @FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      421 year ago

      If you get blisters from that shoe but not the other over the same distance, then the first shoe is not fitted correctly or your socks are too short.

    • DessertStorms
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      171 year ago

      The price used to be forgivable because they would last forever (though I hear that’s not so much the case anymore) but yeah, I’ve had some of my worst blisters from DMs…

        • DessertStorms
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          1 year ago

          Thanks for the tip! Sadly they’re far too heavy for me nowadays 😂(chronic pain = pull up slippers lol)

      • @ClaireDeLuna@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        It all depends on the brand, you just have to research which brand you buy into.

        I got a pair of Solovairs which have been wonderful thus far. They used to produce the OG 1970 Doc Marten before they flipped over to Chinese production, so the solovairs can still be resoled with a local cobbler and the materials are quality too (shoelaces were meh but those are cheap to replace).

        So basically NPS Solovair, and Gripfast are solid lines of shoes to choose from for quality boot build.

      • pelya
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        31 year ago

        Not anymore. They are now using poor rubber for soles that will fall off in 4-5 years.

        • @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Good Year Welt boots are repairable, and re-sole-able.

          The one on the right is completely unrepairable, and the sole is molded and impossible to replace.

    • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Depends what you’re buying. Here’s the secret;

      Norwegian Army M77 boots.

      $130 brand new army surplus. Incredibly high quality, genuine leather, indestructible build, totally waterproof (I have literally submerged my foot past the ankle in puddles and not so much as gotten my sock damp) and extremely comfortable.

      Secret number two is how you wear them. For proper boots like this you need to a) buy a separate inner sole, and b) go up a half size to allow room for thick boot socks.

      With those two things in mind you will have a boot that can tackle anything you throw at it. They’re real leather (and I mean thick, full chap leather) so you will have to break them in. Rub them down constantly with mink oil to keep them moisturized so that they’ll become more flexible. They’ll be uncomfortable at first, but give it time. And once they’re broken in, they’ll basically last the rest of your life if you treat them right.

      Am I gonna wear them all the time? Fuck no. Give me a good pair of Vans anyday. But if you want nice boots that last, this is how you get them.

      • Nobsi
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        11 year ago

        Real good chap of leather and genuine leather contradict eachother.
        Genuine Leather is the worst leather you can get.

      • @negativeyoda@lemmy.world
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        131 year ago

        What in the actual fuck kind of argument is this? You say this as if leather conditioners don’t exist.

        This is like saying, “yeah, buy a Tesla because the F150’s engine will seize if you dive it for 15000 miles without changing the oil”

        I think “sneaker culture” is kind of dumb but don’t really give a fuck if that’s what people are into, but my Alden 405s are from 2004 and have been resoled once. Sneakers are disposable and eventually dry rot whether you take care of them or not. If you’re not a slob, quality footwear will last and is timeless. You also don’t look like a manchild wearing them when you find yourself on the wrong side of 40.

      • @IMongoose@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        I have many leather products, if the item is well built at all it will last for many years without doing anything and even longer if conditioned.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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    161 year ago

    I got these USMC boots for $30 at a gun show in the early aughts. They might have been cheap knock-offs of cheap knock-offs. But they felt like a dream and I could wear them all day and walk for miles without a complaint.

    And when I walked them apart eight years later, I couldn’t find a similar pair that felt right.

    Curiously, my buddy got a pair (different style) from the same vendor at the same show, and her soles fell apart in six months. It’s like I got Aladdin’s Lamp of military boots.

  • @Crow@lemmy.world
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    161 year ago

    Modern boots actually really suck for the most part compared to old boots that were made to be repaired and last.

      • @0ops@lemm.ee
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        81 year ago

        Good point, any crappy cheap boots from back then have already decomposed by now. Survivor bias

  • The Assman
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    161 year ago

    What’s the best boots for men? Looking for a pair I can keep forever and have repaired as needed.

      • The Assman
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        11 year ago

        I’ve been thinking about buying some for ten years, guess I should have already

        • @mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Not sure the Red wings are the same quality anymore.

          Solovair are high quality. Blundstone is excellent as well.

          • @Got_Bent@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            I got my iron rangers a couple years ago and they’re fantastic. I think red wing was juuuust starting to fuck around with quality at that time, but I think it was on other models.

            The break in period on the red wings is legit though. I could only handle them for a couple hours at a time in the beginning. I would bring another pair of shoes with me to work to change into when the boots got too painful.

            After a couple weeks though, so so nice.

    • @Randomunemployment
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      51 year ago

      Look up a YouTuber called Roseanvil. His gimmick is he cuts boots in half so see what they are made of. Short list of good, better, best… Thorogood, redwing, nicks. I work everyday in a pair of Thorogood not too expensive so I don’t have to worry about damaging them and they are really comfortable. Redwing better quality and slightly more trendy/iconic, cool to wear around the city. Nicks are a higher end work boot, if your life depends on your boots get a pair of nicks, think wildland firefighter/logger. Honorable mentions Thursday, a fashionable boot that can be repaired easily. Jim green best bang for your buck, got my super picky father a pair, he loves them and gets compliments from his fellow boomer truck drivers.

    • Margot Robbie
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      51 year ago

      Look for Goodyear welted boots, if the soles wear out, you can take it to a cobbler to resole them.

      • Is sole wearing a thing that only relatively expensive shoes get? I’ve never spent more than $130 on shoes, and I’ve never had a sole wear out before the upper started tearing away from the bottom

        • 🐍🩶🐢
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          31 year ago

          It really depends on the shoe and what kind of working conditions, stress, and exposure to various elements they are getting. Sometimes it can be due to the way you walk too. You can get most shoes resoled and oftentimes they will fit better than they did originally. A good cobbler can repair separation issues too, where the bottom/sole is detaching. It never hurts to take them in and ask. They can do general maintenance too and clean them up.

          I wouldn’t say “really expensive”, as it is all relative, but to me a good pair of boots is going to run in the ~$150-220 range. You can get some a little cheaper, but I am used to getting boots for construction.

    • @curiousaur@reddthat.com
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      51 year ago

      Starter boot? Get some redwings. The best? Whites or Nick’s. It’s worth a trip to Spokane to get sized, then they make the boots to you.

    • @Basil
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      21 year ago

      Thorogood are expensive but are phenomenal. I’d argue better than Red Wing

  • @rmuk@feddit.uk
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    161 year ago

    Please: maintain your boots. Every couple of months, just ten minutes to brush and roughly polish them will keep them going for years and years.

  • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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    131 year ago

    modern shoes in general absolutely suck, i’ve got a pair of wildling boots which are effectively thick wool socks with rubber outsoles and i just can’t go back now, it’s so much more comfortable.

    not to mention that the shoes are so flexible that i can roll them up and stuff them in a bag if needed.