Handmade Shoes - Seamless WholecutssteemCreated with Sketch.

in #shoes7 years ago

The first time I saw a seamless wholecut, I could hardly believe my eyes that this is possible. Seamless wholecuts are somewhat of a rarity, to my knowledge the industry has not come up yet with a machine which can mass produce them. So, until they do, a seamless has to be made by hand.

Disclaimer: This is just MY WAY of making a seamless. I could not find much about it on the internet, so this is what I came up with. There might be much better, smarter, “correcter” ways of doing it…

A few things are important though in my mind.

The last should be perfect, both in shape and in fit. The shape of the last is the only real design element. There are no broques, stitches or other embellishments on the shoe, so the beauty of it is determined only by the beauty of the leather and the shape of the last.

A perfect fit is always a nice thing, but on a wholecut it becomes even more of an issue. A bad fit will result in excessive ugly creases, the wholecut will show a bad fit without mercy.

The leather should not be too thick and have some stretch in it.

Recommended are brass nails because the leather needs to be lasted wet. Iron nails will leave nasty black spots, something which can be avoided with brass nails.

Making a seamless is actually easier than I initially thought, the key is that the leather needs to be “blocked”.

Actually, I block it twice. For the first time, I just stretch the wet leather over the last and let it dry.

This is just a rough stretch and I don’t use too many nails, important is just to put in the nails as far away from the featherline as possible and stretch the leather as much as it allows for the first time. There will be some creases at the featherline which is unavoidable – you try to fit 30 cm of upper onto 15 cm of insole, there must be creases and a lot of extra material….

I then put in an already prepared heel counter and block the leather a second time, this time using more nails and making an effort to have as little as possible creasing beyond the featherline. A little bit is fine, since this is not final anyway. Again, make an effort to stay away from the feather as much as possible with the nails. Since the final pattern is not cut yet and also the lining is not present it is better to be safe than sorry later and discover you have some nailholes where you don’t want them. This also the reason why I put in the heelcounter at this stage.

Why the heelcounter you might ask? First, the leather is being abused at the heel, it is being stretched to it’s limits and compressed at some places, so a strong heelcounter is a good idea. Second, the heelcounter will give me a clean line where the upper meets the sole. My heelcounter is skived next to nothing on the top edge but I leave it at it’s fullest thickness at the bottom.

Once the upper is dry, I take it off and pre-last the lining.

I turn the dried upper around and cut he pattern.

On these shoes I don’t want to use top beading, that would make them look too bulky for my taste, so I just bend the leather over at the edges.

Now the upper and the lining fit together nicely. I first glue them together so they don’t slip, then I stitch them.

I last the lining only and glue on the toe puff and heel counter. They are both polished with a deerbone to make them as smooth and perfect as possible.

To get a low and delicate toe, I trim it at the featherline. If I would do it the traditional way the toe would look too bulky and I don’t want that. I want the toe to look like this:

Since there is so much extra material from the upper, I believe the best way is to use a 360 welt.

The heelcounter is trimmed at the feather as well, it will give me a nice, crisp edge.

I glue the material which I saved when cutting the inside channel of the holdfast back in to achieve a smooth surface.

The shank is embedded in the insole.

The rest is business as usual, but I want to mention that I use a piece of strong plastic to avoid toolmarks from the awl.

And here are the finished shoes…

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Nicely finished! My father used to make wooden + leather clogs, similar technique, quite suave!

These are the kinds of skills that should be kept alive. We rely too heavily on manufactured tat these days. What a brilliant pair of shoes. Proper works of art and craft. Kudos all over the place, man.

I'm recharging my voting power at the mo. Will pop back in when I've got some :)

LOL. I have notorious issues with power AND bandwidth as well. Posted about it...
https://steemit.com/steemit/@herrleeb/to-all-my-fellow-truth-seekers-and-friends

Thank you for the compliment! I am an amateur, learned it by myself. Got inspired by Daniel Day-Lewis who also learned how to make them. Kept me busy for a while...Now I don't have the energy anymore.

I agree about the manufactured point you make. I also like quality that lasts for a while and not junk intended to be thrown away quickly.
The other aspect is, that people don't know how to do stuff anymore. I enjoyed fixing my cars, cooking, laying tiles in my apartment, sewing a jacket or making shoes.
Nowadays people don't know how to do anything anymore, every skill is being taken away. You have your Navi in the car, no need to pay attention where you are going.
As Max Igan said it so well, people will soon need an implant to tell them when to scratch their back side.

Cheers to the UK 🙂

Those shoes look far from amateurish though. You'd get a fortune for those if you ever decided to sell. They'll last for a very long time, I'm sure.

Yes, I made a point about people being like babies in my post on surviving a zombie apocalypse. Your shoes inspired me lol.

Same, I learned how to do many things from raw materials. My mum taught me how to make clothes and crochet. She taught me how to knit but that one didn't stick. I also did a cabinet making course (short one) so I can make (very basic) furniture. I also do all the decorating, gardening, cooking, making money. I quickly learned a bit about plumbing when I had a flood :p

These are important things to teach the kids. They're never gonna learn anything useful in school (slave training academy).

Lol, satnav: my phone battery was dying on a long trip to an unfamiliar place. Luckily I had actual pen and paper in my bag and was able to jot down the main city/town names to follow on the motorway signs before it went dead.

Lol @maxigan true :D

cheers

Glad I found you on steemit. We have the same mindset, a dying breed though...
The only positive aspect of what is happening to future generations is that they never know it any other way, they will not even know what they are missing.
And if you think about it...we don't know what WE are missing either.
Maybe we might be much more powerful than we think, we simply never found out?

I'm glad I've found you too.

I worry this is all a plan to make a generation of eunuchs that are incapable of looking after themselves. Dependents. Slaves. Scary.

Yeahhhhh... we ARE the strong ones! If shit goes down, our chances of survival are pretty good, better than the youngers anyway.

Oh, and I came back with my vote. A whole 2-3 cents hahahah Don't spend it all at once, friend :D

LOL. I will spend it on food, don't worry!
But seriously, you don't need to upvote my posts, it's alright with me if you want to save your steem. I am very happy if I get a comment, that already makes my day 🙂

lol you'll starve to death man.

I wanna upvote. Your posts always give good info, fearless info giving. You deserve to be better known than you are.

LOL. I am just a dumb actor who has nobody to talk to. I am using steemit to blow off some steem and have some interaction with like minded people.
I resteemed a great post today. Check it out, you might like it...Sunny Greetings from LA to the UK
https://steemit.com/truth/@lexicographer/thought-of-the-day

Very nice!! Do you sell handmade shoes? would love to check out your shop. Thanks for sharing your technique.

Thank you, glad you like them!
But no, I don't sell them, I make them for myself only just to keep myself from getting stupid ideas 🙂

This is a really nice post. Great photos too.

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