Lisa,
Well, I’m back from the holidays and even though I promised myself I would not be drawn into this discussion any further, I feel there are so many errors in your previous posting, not to mention what I feel are insulting comments about myself, that I can no longer withhold my rebuttal.
First of all, if you will note in my opening comments I was talking about US PRODUCTION LASTS and I stand firm on my statements. You can quote Swaysland, Golding, and all the Masters thesis papers you want to but there is absolutely ZERO evidence than “types of feet” have had anything to do with production lasts made in the US in at least the past 40-50 years and most likely before that. If there had been any such considerations then the shoe and boot styles on the shelves of the stores would have not simply been sized with numbers and a few width letters. You would have had choices such as “high arch” or “low arch”, “narrow heel” or “medium heel”, “short forepart” or “normal forepart”, “high instep” or “low instep”, etc., etc. These choices have not been available nor are they ever likely to be in the mainstream retail business. It is simply not cost effective for stores to maintain that type of inventory or for manufacturers to invest in the tooling required to make so many variations of a style.
By no means am I saying this would not be a good idea. It would be a GREAT idea....if it could work. But in the production and off the shelf retail world, it never has been achievable and it never will be. Thank God we have custom shoe and boot makers who don’t have the volume restrictions than tie the hands of mass manufacturers. Those are the only makers who will ever be able to utilize the ideas of pioneers such as Golding, Swaysland, or even more recently, Rossi.
The wonderful models you saw at Joe Patrickus’ shop and purchased from Jim Bowman DO NOT depict a beautiful adherence to any study of footwear types, at least not if they are production models originally designed for mass manufacturers. They simply are good looking models that “fit” whoever they fit because they were made to good specs and with commons sense. Even at that however, it would be foolish to think that they will perfectly fit everyone who has footwear made from them for the very reasons we have both pointed out. People have their “own thing” going on with their feet. Maybe it’s a high arch, maybe it’s a flat heel, maybe it’s a high instep but the chances of these angelic models producing a last by simple grading, with no custom modifications to fit these feet is about as good as the chances of my beloved St. Louis Blues making the playoffs this year....it just ain’t going to happen!
Also, if you saw a run of models that showed different cone shapes and angles (angles of what by the way?) going from width to width or from size to size, you saw models that had been modified. Any model maker who made an E width with a different cone shape than the D width on the same style would not be a model maker very long and other than holding to a steel toe schedule, there would be no reason to make a size 8 AND a size 8.5 model on the same style unless customization was going on and I doubt that these models you’re discussing were for steel toed footwear.
As for Carl Lichte’s use of the contour gauge to make a heel curve template from a foot, this is something that model makers have done for as long as they’ve been making CUSTOM models. However, for some types of footwear you’d better take into consideration the materials and construction involved and not just slap the exact same heel curve on the last that you have on your foot. You mention court shoes in your lengthy dissertation. If you don’t allow for extra padding in those types of shoes, especially at the top where you often have a padded collar, you will still have fit issues, even though the shoes are “soft and fluffy”. Plus, as I recall, you said when you purchased your one pair of lasts from me that the lasts Carl made for you were over a size too big, something that I had trouble understanding at the time and still have my doubts about.
Also, you mention that you purchased your lasts from me a size small to allow for build ups and other customization. I find that odd since you had no idea what the measurements (even the length) were. You simply ordered a size and said you would live with it, that you were mainly interested in seeing the style, since it was one of the legendary Krentler Brothers lasts from the 1940s.
Another disagreement I have with your posting is where you say that problems in fit can have nothing to do with pattern making since this is typically done “off the last” that the shoe is made on. Actually it’s done off the master size and graded, where problems CAN occur if allowances and grade breaks are not positioned properly but it can also occur on the same master size the original patterns are drafted on. Placing the vamp too far forward, the backheight too low, making the topline unbalanced, and a whole host of other things can cause problems even though those patterns may sit on that last like skin. It’s a long leap from a paper pattern to a shoe.
You also mention that “higher heel curves are allowed by factory plastic lasts to facilitate machine production and provide the average fit”. Again, there are several things wrong with this statement. First, it would make no difference if the lasts were made from plastic or wood. They are all produced on the same lathes and the heel curves are hand finished by the same workers with the same templates. Second, the higher the heel curve, the MORE DIFFICULT the machining. No last maker would make a higher heel curve if they could avoid it. And third, the SHAPE of the heel curve and the angle have far more to do with fit than the height since in most footwear the shoe is shorter in height than the last anyway.
I take GREAT exception with your comment that the approach of digitized last development only deals with the class of feet known as “average”. Digital last development is used for whatever the developer wants to use it for whether that be production lasts for mass manufacturers or custom lasts for individual makers. To say that there is a difference in a digital last as opposed to a manually developed last is ridiculous. That’s like saying someone can’t write as well with a word processor as they can with pen and paper. You also claim to have “examined” digital lasts within and out of CAD programs and that they are without the subtle anatomical nuances that provided good fit back when lasts were developed by hand. Nonsense!! If they were without these great features it’s because the last they were developed from was without them and whoever made them either didn’t take it upon themselves to enhance the fit or their customer never asked them to. On the other hand if they HAD these wonderful fit features it’s not because they were digitally developed, it’s because someone either put them in the base last that was digitized or added them after the fact in the CAD system. Being digital or non-digital hasn’t got a blasted thing to do with the quality of a last. It’s all about who is developing the last, with or without CAD!!
And finally you patronize me by saying you “understand” what I write to be “within the range of my experience in commercial last making”. For your information I have been doing this for over 31 years and with the exception of my four year hiatus to work for Lectra I have spent most of the past 15 years working with custom boot and shoe makers all over the world and even in the four years I was working for Lectra stayed involved in the industry and never really “left” last making.
My suggestion, as I’ve told you before, would be for you to take your Gilman lathe and finally make some lasts with it. Get some experience with some sawdust or plastic shavings. Make some lasts and then make some boots for yourself from those lasts and see how they fit. Experiment. See what happens to other areas of a last when you modify one area. Put all of your reading to work. Get your hands dirty making what you like so much to write about and then, just maybe, you’ll have some credibility on the subject.
I fully acknowledge that this is being written from an emotional standpoint but trust me, I gave myself 48 hours to calm down and tried not to think about it during Christmas. However, I simply could not leave such uninformed opinions on the forum without a rebuttal. Obviously I don’t expect to receive any additional orders from you and I’m truly OK with that. If I’ve offended anyone else with my tone and that costs me business, I will just have to suffer the consequences but I will NOT let a bunch of loose cannon babbling lead anyone astray when I and quite a few others who have remained silent know better. My only apologies are to the forum administrators and if I’m banned for this outburst it just means I will have more time to make lasts.
Bill “The Last Man Standing” Tippit
www.globalfootwearsolutions.com