Showing posts with label Peal and Co.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peal and Co.. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Today's Shoes



Day

Edward Green bespoke Adelaide bals with hand-stitching forming the diamond cap, the U throat, and the heel counter. Tony Gaziano, who made the lasts for these shoes, is a chisel-toe specialist; and these shoes have the chiseliest of chisel toes. That was intentional: I wanted something extremely aggressive, and that's what he made for me. I imagine that I will have Tony make more shoes for me at some point, but I think that the next pair will have a smart round toe.

Evening

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co. unlined three-eyelet plain-toe blucher boots in sand suede with heavy crepe rubber soles.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Today's Shoes

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co. three-eyelet plain-toe unlined chukka boots in sand-colored suede with a crepe rubber sole. In other words, they're desert boots. And they're not as nice as the desert boots that I just got in from Gravati. Of course, they were a lot less expensive.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Today's Shoes

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co. unlined three-eyelet plain-toe ankle blucher boots in light tan suede with light tan crepe rubber soles. Also known as desert boots, of course.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Today's Shoes

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co. three-eyelet unlined desert boots in light tan suede with crepe rubber soles. No, the boot to the right is not mine. It's one made by Clark, which is the original marketer of the desert boot after World War II. The lacing of my boots is less low-slung than the one pictured, mine have three eyelets rather than two, and mine have thin round laces instead of those broad flat ones. The last that my boots are made on is much shaplier, too. But the boot pictured should give you a good idea of what mine look like.

Crepe rubber soles are extremely cushy. The positive thing about this is that they are comfortable, particularly when walking on hard surfaces. The problem is that it can sometimes feel like walking through loose sand, which can get tiring. The complete lack of arch support doesn't help, either. Still, these are good boots, at least for my purposes -- I'm not exactly going on campaign in them.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Today's Shoes

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co. three-eyelet unlined chukka boots in tan suede with crepe rubber soles. Ultimately, I think that these are going to be very comfortable shoes, particularly for walking on cement, because of the spongy rubber soles, but they have two problems. The first is that they are made from tan suede, which will show water spots and other stains very readily. The second is that the crepe rubber soles are light yellow and show in excruciating detail just how filthy the streets, parking lots, and sidewalks of Houston are. Oh, well. They'll be easier to care for than white bucks, at least.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Today's Shoes

Brooks Brothers Peal & Co three-eyelet unlined chukka boots in light tan suede with a crepe rubber sole. In common parlance, these are called desert boots, and the design originated with boots that officers in the British Eighth Army bought to wear during campaigning in North Africa during World War II. They were popularized in 1949 by a man named Nathan Clark, a member of the Clark family that owned a shoemaking firm, who saw them on British Army officers and thought that they would make a great civilian shoe. They were a fabulous success, and just about every manufacturer has offered their own rendition of the boot. Mine, which were delivered yesterday, are from Brooks Brothers and bear the label Peal & Co. Peal was a celebrated British bespoke shoemaker, and when they folded up shop in the middle of the 20th Century, Brooks Brothers bought the trademark. Since then, Brooks has sold many, many shoes under the Peal & Co. label from a variety of English shoe manufacturers, including Edward Green, Crockett & Jones, and Alfred Sargent. If I were a betting man, I would bet that these are from Alfred Sargent. They're decent enough shoes -- the last is relatively shapely, the boots are cut above the bulge of the ankles, the crepe rubber soles make the shoes cushy and comfortable (for those who don't know what crepe rubber is, think rubber the consistency of those gum rubber erasers that you had in elementary school). I wish that there were a strap reinforcing the back seam, and I wish that the manufacturer had done a better job skiving the leather pieces at that seam (there's too much of a ridge, which should not be). But they were only $225. At the full price of $450, they would have been too much. At half price, I think I got a decent bargain.