fitting pt. finis
One other consideration that I have been asked about many times. A consideration that many never even take into account (esp. shoemakers) and that's the short heel and how to determine what the SH on a last is for the purposes of comparing it with the SH on the foot. When we make a pull-on boot, the short heel from the foot as well as the short heel from the last are critically important. The short heel from the foot must be factored into the throat of the boot to allow access for the foot. And just as importantly, a correct short heel holds the foot back and prevents the foot from sliding forward. In the absence of laces, only a correct short heel ensures a fit.
When I first started making...and many, if not all, bootmakers are trained this way...I was taught to plug the short heel measurement from the foot into my top patterns. You see variations, in the literature, of this concept in almost every discussion of 'long work.'
Somewhere along the line, however, I got to wondering what I would/could do if I wanted to make a 'standard size' boot--I would not have a short heel measurement from an actual foot. And that led me to wonder ...and eventually come to believe...that the short heel on the last must be near-as-nevermind the same as the short heel on the foot or the fit will be compromised. As far as I know, few of my peers, regardless of how talented they are otherwise, can take an ordinary 9C last, for example, and determine what the short heel measurement is. And most, if not all 'shoemakers' (as opposed to shoemakers who all so do 'long work') don't even think about the short heel. All of which, to my mind, falls well short of understanding.
But there is a method to determine SH from the last that I developed independent of any other influence. I have often regretted that I did not include this information when I wrote the book, but while simple in concept, I didn't really know how to explain my thinking on the subject or even whether it would be suitable for a novice, simply because I have never run across any other author or shoemaker who has dealt with the issue. Having said all that, I am also not sure that every model of last will yield to this technique.
My thinking...my approach...relies heavily on Sabbage and to a small degree the concept of the 'grid.' The way I measure feet and the way I transfer those measurements to a last ensures that my girth measurements are, despite being closely associated with salient features of the foot, spaced evenly apart--along the extended 'hypotenused' sectiosn. If we superimpose a profile of the foot on a profile of the last, it quickly becomes apparent that while we can find locations on the last that correspond to most of the girths on the foot, there simply isn't enough last to find the front of the ankle (where the SH is taken). [There are exceptions...some makers carve or build up lasts through the top of the instep and into the ankle in order to make high lace up boot.]
So, if there is no location on the last that can be associated with the short heel on the foot, what can we do? Well, we know from Sabbage that all our girths are separated by a roughly equal amount. It follows then that the high instep should be one section down the cone of the last from where the SH would plug in if it weren't 'up in the air." If we visualize the side of the foot superimposed over the side of the last and further imagine a line along which the SH girth is taken, and then we imagine rotating that line around some central pivot point such that the back end rises up the back of the heel of the last one section, the forward end should drop down one section to the high instep mark.(See illustration below)
If we drop a string loop that measures exactly the same as our SH measurement, around the top of the last such that one part of the loop lays over the HI and the other touches the mark one section above the featherline at the back of the heel...and there is no slack nor shortage...the SH of the last should be close, close enough for fit and comfort.This is a very difficult measurement to take because of the angles involved and the slipperiness of the last. So I look to just see the string hitting these marks, not necessarily wrapping around the last to any degree. That said, there's probably some room for adjustments based on the tension on the string loop, etc.. Not to mention the results from any fitter's model.
It should be noted that there is a balance here between high instep girth and the SH girth--one or the other can be off while the other is dead on. That's an indication that any build-ups or reductions made prior to checking the SH are in the wrong place.
The long heel, if it is wanted...and I do, is both measured and transferred to the last from the one section up mark on the foot / last to the middle cuneiform / low instep. And the same 'balance' criteria apply vis the LH and the LI.
Beyond that--a caveat: These illustrations are just my 'fanciful' drawings (although they are based on a layout very much like Sabbage's using my own LOF and SLL measurements scaled to the drawings). It should be noted that there may be some distortion and depending on the size of last (as well as the block it was turned from), features such as the hinge may be in a different place relative to the rest of the last than is depicted. Your high instep mark may appear to be further down the cone of the last than is shown (mine usually are).
Finally...or coming close...there is lots more that can be said; lots more than can be, and perhaps should be, factored in...some of it 'ineffable', as who should say--gut feeling, instinct. And not everyone will do it this way. Or consider my attempts at codifying this process, useful. Not all lasts are equal. No two feet are equal, even on the same person. However, referring back to earlier posts (mine especially since it's my process) about fitting in this thread and referencing Sabbage at every turn, can fill in a lot of the blanks.
I have never tried to lay it out like this before--the auld wisdom about brevity and time applies to years of time not weeks.

That said, it works for me...I can honestly say just about
every time...and if it doesn't, the reason is usually pretty apparent. I hope it helps. No guarantees.
last and foot2.jpg
Tioraidh...
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