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Brilliant idea, i bought a pair for 4 £ and transformed them in barefoot shoes, instead of paying 150£ or more for some boots from Vivobarefoot.
ОтветитьWould somone be kind enough to tell this uninformed American the difference between a pound and a quid?
ОтветитьThanks for sharing this project! I want to make a pair like this. It's really hard to find any shoe like this for under about $150 in the USA.
Ответитьthis looks like the PROHo dudes brother
ОтветитьBest not to breath in leather dust, it's carcinogenic....very. Think asbestos level bad
Good tutorial. That neoprene contact adhesive can be made to have a strong bond by hammering the parts together. Hence the term impact adhesive used with some brands of glue.
Great idea, thanks a lot!
A few remarks: this planer is a tool for dry wall installation or gypsum boards. Not sure if I would use it but would instead try some low grid sandpaper like 60, 80 or 100 grid probably on a power sander.
OK, re. the contact glue:
you want to paste it with a brush on both sides but not very think, check with the tip of your finger after 10-15 minutes if the thinner in the glue has evaporated meaning it doesn't stick to your finger anymore once it dried enough,
put both parts together (that's the tricky part as there's no way to correct positioning anymore and smash all of the glued area with a flat rubber hammer spot after spot. Contact glue does NOT require any drying time like wood glue. But it loves ONE second or so of max pressure!
Bochem makes even better glue, called "Bonikol Pur-B". I think it's kind of industrial-strong one 💪Check it out. Greetings from Poland😁
ОтветитьWhy they last LESS than usual ?
ОтветитьThat’s a rasp.
ОтветитьI am going to make my cousin Ed running to turn into a zero drop. Save money. Thanks
ОтветитьI would love to do this with more shoes. I've had ankle injuries and can't stand even a small heel. I like completely flat shoes and boots.
I think if I were going to do this, I would draw the outline of the shoe on the new sole but not cut it out. I would then scuff both sides and apply the glue within the perimeter and stick the boot on so that any excess could be cut off if it wasn't aligned perfectly. Then you can cut around it and clamp it and clean it up after it sits for 24hrs.
For clamping, I would have used some sort of painting sticks or wood strips that could extend the middle and clamp on either side to put pressure over the middle as well as the edges.
Before gluing anything on, I would have tidied up the threads on the shoe with a threadzapper so there were no strands hanging out. How well do the new soles grip when walking?
This helped me to see the construction of the boots and I plan to do something like this using some slippers. Thank you.
Don’t need clamps. Contact cement is applied to both surfaces then allowed to dry. It’s pressure that sticks the two together. Just use a hammer to hammer the two together. Have you ever seen a cobbler use clamps? Answer: no.
ОтветитьA follow up to see how They go Please Neil would be great to see , and that goes for all Your Kit !
ОтветитьI am thinking a walmart pair of house slip on chanks, remove the bottom soul from the inner soul as a proto type... Yes, yeeeeees that is a mighty fine idea for now...
ОтветитьWell crafted my friend.
ОтветитьHow long did they last?
ОтветитьBarge might be a good alternative for sole cement. Thanks for video.
ОтветитьThe difference between who you are and who you want to be. Is what you do.
ОтветитьI'm going to be doing this with my trail runners that I bought from goodwill for $7 I'm just going to be cutting out the foam and leaving the base trail rubber layer only then sewing it all together and gluing as needed I really like your idea a whole lot because I also don't want to buy $150 pair of winter boots so hopefully I can find some boots I can do this to as well :)
Ответитьyip it was a great watch. After watching this I thought I'd cut my boxer shorts down to reduce the weight
ОтветитьCan you purchase thicker soling material?
ОтветитьGreat video and awesome idea. I’m going to try it. Thanks for sharing 👍
ОтветитьYup, it is in polish language and it translates as "shoemaker's glue" :)
And the process was correct. It is a butapren glue, so you cover both roughed up sides, degass it for 15 - 20 mins, stick it together and clamp it for a day:) Also your ventilation remark was good. It smells badly and it's not good for health.
Hello the original boots look already very comfort, could not just catch Which boots these are, can you provide name/brand ? Good to know how can fix them and give them a second live. Btw how quiet are they when stalking in the woods (on dead leafs branches etc) ?
ОтветитьLove this idea. We definitely need an update video to for comfort, durability etc. Keep up the great work.
ОтветитьGreat video
ОтветитьI'm disappointed. "Re-Sole Your Boots to Zero Drop" would be a better title.
ОтветитьLook to the skate boarding industry for real comfort and lightweight insoles.
Ответитьso, aside from fashion, how are they to walk around the woods in? Slipping on everything? Archs ache? None of the above?
ОтветитьA lot cheaper than buying vivobarefoot. Maybe Dremel some grip in to keep them ZD
ОтветитьWhat was the name of the pair of desert boots you modified?
ОтветитьMonthy Phytons reference in 1st minute was enough for me to subscribe :)
ОтветитьAn old rubber doormat works really well for outsole material. Usually has nonslip tred design and it's made to be walked on. You could make a nice pair of boots for close to nothing if you are willing to search around a bit.
ОтветитьIsn't it possible to buy precut replacement rubber soles?
Ответитьi need tthis shoes who can i buy them
ОтветитьChiming in here as a "barefoot" hiker/runner. Been wearing Luna sandals for years (about 10 now?), absolutely love them. Before wearing them I used Vibram 5-finger toe shoes for a few years, but getting them sized properly was a huge pain compared to the barefoot sandals that are available so I moved on from them.
Luna sandals are basically just that rubber soling material with some straps, looks like boots made in this method would work great. You could also make sandals out of this same method by cutting two slots, one on each side a bit ahead of the ankle, and then punching a hole in the spot between the big toe and the one next to it. Put some nylon webbing through that front hole, tie a stopper knot on the underside, and run the other side over the top of the foot and through the slot on the outside of the foot. Run it around the back of the foot, through the slot on the inside of the foot, and then tie it off to the portion passing over the foot. Very cool to see that it's basically just as simple to make a boot using cut-to-size soling material like that.
And yeah, the feeling of having such lightweight footwear is amazing, almost addictive even. I can't go back to hiking in big heavy shoes that each weigh more than twice as much as the sandals I'm used to.. but I could see myself using lightweight boots like this.
So the zero drop trend is basically just a revisit to things like Chucks and Van's from the 90s, but now it's "natural"...
ОтветитьI'm wearing Designer Swedish Military Surplus. A bit of M59 crossed with M90 with a splash of English (not British) MTP. 🤣 With a choice of LK35/70 or a civvy Haglöfs when I don't want to freak people out 😹
ОтветитьThe glue is a professional cobbler's glue, great bang for the buck
ОтветитьI worked a few years on a shoe repair business. Soles like that can easily be removed with all purpose thinner that some leather craft store sell. Soles are put back on with contact cement. Hammer the sole back on if you do not have a shoe press from the interior to the edges.
A note of caution: boots with heals are often constructed with a shank in the sole to support the arch as well as the upper is shaped to match this shape. Removing the heal may make the foot ware uncomfortable.
More like Zero-drip lmao
Ответитьyey polish glue... or just one made for both english speaking and polish market?
ОтветитьI made boot souls from tires they last a long time and you can make sandals also
Ответитьwhere can I get a smock like that?
ОтветитьThis is interesting; in your language "to chuck" seems to mean "to add" or "to put on" while in mine it means "to get rid of something, often by throwing it."
ОтветитьAny idea if you can still get these? I’m looking for a warm weather pair of boots
ОтветитьGlad to see a video like this since I have very wide feet and most zero drop is very narrow.
ОтветитьTake a look at the traditional south African veldskoens or "bush shoes". Look very similar and we have worn them for generations.
ОтветитьDo you have a link to the original boots you used?
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