You can write to the good lady that organizes the Zlin conference, Mirka Stybrova, and ask her to buy the proceedings books from the first three. This year's ought to be out in print by Spring '05
Thanks. I'll look into it. Any idea what the books cost?
Nope. You leave the bracing in place, just lay the leather outer sole right on top.
Now I'm confused. If the rand is being pulled in by the bracing stitch, how do you sew it to the outer sole? Sorry to be so dense, I'm just not very good at visualizing something from a text description. I'm too visual.
That's cool. I was just curious whether it was a stitch-for-stitch exact copy of some existing boot was all. It's fine if it isn't. I realize there are few complete medieval examples to copy, like there are from the 1600s and later periods.
Speaking of which, in looking for any information I could find online for the Zlin conference, I found an interesting website about a paper presented at the 2001 conference. You and Marc are probably already aware of it, but others may be interested. It is on a cache of artifacts discovered in a building in Kempten, Germany including a large number of shoes, some complete. The collection dates from around 1470 - 1550. I was especially interested in the illustration marked figure 7. It shows multiple drawings of one particular shoe in the cache. One with lacing still partially intact. The laces travel diagonally, though there isn't enough remaining to determine whether the pattern crosses over itself or is just a diagonal ladder. Interesting nonetheless. It would also seem to show a tongue, though this, too is unclear.
Site is here:
http://www.uni-bamberg.de/~ba5am1/info/shoes.htm
There you go, Marc! Now you have an extant shoe with surviving lacing! Heh.
In trying to find a bit more information about this Kempten find, I stumbled upon a mid - late 15th century painting by Andrea del Verrocchio entitled "Tobias and the Angel" which clearly shows mid-calf high boots, laced up the inside in a diagonal ladder style. These do not have a tongue, as the color of the hose is visible through the lacing.
You can see it here:
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/cgi-bin/WebObjects.dll/CollectionPublisher.woa /wa/work?searchString=Verrocchio&searchField=Artist%20Name&collectionName=&workN umber=NG781
Very nice painting BTW, and the Javascript Zoom function allows for good, closeup views of details like the lacing.