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02-10-2019 03:35 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
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There are still businesses out there that resole shoes, though they're getting harder and harder to find, especially ones that don't just slather on the shoe glue and put on rubber replacement soles. But they can be found
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by
Undinist
Is there an established method for resoling boots which were made with wooden pegs?
Yes it is. My father was a shoe maker and I have hammered in many wooden pegs. You need to fill the holes left over from the last sole somehow.
Ralph.
Searching for anything relating to, Anton Boos, 934 Stamm. Kp. Pz. Erz. Abt. 7, 3 Kompanie, Panzer-Regiment 2, 16th Panzer-Division (My father)
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by
Brig
There are still businesses out there that resole shoes, though they're getting harder and harder to find, especially ones that don't just slather on the shoe glue and put on rubber replacement soles. But they can be found
Here in the UK, businesses which resole Goodyear welted shoes are in every town. But if a shoe has no welt I doubt they'd want to try a proper resole job.
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rbminis
Yes it is. My father was a shoe maker and I have hammered in many wooden pegs. You need to fill the holes left over from the last sole somehow.
Ralph.
Amazing! I wonder if shoe repairers still offer that service anywhere?
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Why bother re-soling them at all? Do you intend to wear them? If the answer is 'no', then why not just clean them up and keep them original?
Cheers,
Steve
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Well, I would wear them. I don't have any kit for display.
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So I won the auction - I was the only bidder and got the boots for 6.99 Euros. They are officer's riding boots, so maybe that's why nobody else bid. I obviously have no idea what buyers of WW2 German boots are looking for!
rbminis, do you happen to know when wooden-pegged boots stopped being made for the German military? Were the pegs still used when the Bundeswehr got going in the '50s?
I also have some relatively recent Bundeswehr-issued jackboots. Superb quality, Goodyear welted. Another lucky find, which cost me all of £5!
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Undinist
rbminis, do you happen to know when wooden-pegged boots stopped being made for the German military? Were the pegs still used when the Bundeswehr got going in the '50s?
That I don't know, I know we were still using them in the 60's, 70's and 80's.
Ralph.
Searching for anything relating to, Anton Boos, 934 Stamm. Kp. Pz. Erz. Abt. 7, 3 Kompanie, Panzer-Regiment 2, 16th Panzer-Division (My father)
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