Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Tracking the Sole


After owning these shoes for a year or two (I think), I have made several overdue discoveries about these weird things.  First, after months of staining my socks, I realized that the interiors were red.




It took me months to put two and two together on the interiors, but it was very recently that I even noticed that there were little sailboats on the soles.




I was thumbing through some stuff while waiting at a Boston tailor recently, when I saw this advertisement imploring suburban Dads to get style make-overs.



If your men's style blogging experience has been noticeably more pleasant recently, it may because I have been posting less often.  As a warning, it will likely increase soon.

10 comments:

  1. I've never heard of anyone wearing socks with boat shoes. Folks who sail know that using them on a boat will get them wet and enable the color to fade and pass unnoticed. Bottom line: You should not wear socks with these shoes.

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  2. I wear socks with boat shoes throughout the winter. For sailing sockless, I have a pair of older Dexters that have outlasted everything else by a decade.

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  3. i really enjoy reading your blog and i don't mind you posting lots of stuffs.:D

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  4. It's great that they were able to use Boston icon Cliff Clavin for the makeover.

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  5. So, you're going to force upon us more written entries? Do what you have to.

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  6. Didn't you know? The boats on the bottom are what make them for sailing....jeez

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  7. I've ruined every pair of deck shoes I've ever owned by wearing them sockless. Sperry's, Docksiders, Quoddy's...sweaty feet trash the insides.

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  8. Lots of folks wear socks with boat shoes, and lots of folks manage to sail without getting their feet wet.

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  9. A long time ago, you did a post on the writing of a man focused on documenting old ways -- road rollers, sledges, stone walls, wood-stacking -- accompanied by some fantastic line drawings. I can't find it now, but that was the one that hooked me. That, and this one are perhaps my favorites. One or two others. I like clothes, sure. But I enjoy knowing that your choices have a depth rooted in identity -- and as much as you have standards you seem to refrain from extending your judgment about clothing to judgment about people (pretty much).

    This is a long way of saying I'm looking forward to reading more from you.

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    Replies
    1. Eric Sloane... one of my favorites. His work embodies much of what I hope to be (but likely will never get close to).

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Let's keep it clean... but if you DO have to get foul, at least give it a bit of wit. Also, advertising disguised as comments will be deleted, unless it is clever.