I love my brown Cleverleys – the first bespoke shoes I owned – but I’ve never been that happy with the colour. Cleverley are good at many things, but patination is not one of them. George Jr has looked at introducing a patination service, but it’s not something that’s readily available yet.
I love my brown Cleverleys – the first bespoke shoes I owned – but I’ve never been that happy with the colour. Cleverley are good at many things, but patination is not one of them. George Jr has looked at introducing a patination service, but it’s not something that’s readily available yet.
Hi Simon,
You could have been a good chemist too! You definetly love experimenting new things! Personally, I simply wouldn’t have made the try. Instead, I would have simply used from to time various types of wax.
Carreducker is of course the right place in London for a biginner who takes things seriously like you!
John
Hi Simon,
I agree about Cleverley and patination / colour. Perhaps it has been seen as not very English!! They are fantastic at everything else. I have found Lobb [bespoke St James’s] the same. I practised on a nice pair of Edward Green’s with some success, but don’t think I will risk the Cleverley ones. By the way, I would like to be able to contribute as a person but can’t seem to do it – not normally a failure at on-line things but any hints would be appreciated. I don’t have a personal URL.
Permanent Style is so informative, thank you.
Best wishes
Ian Franklin
Thanks Ian. It’s down to G&G’s experience with Northampton RTW, where a lot more finishing goes on. And of course its RTW operation – London makers are unlikely to have a burnishing machine sitting in the corner. It’s not surprising Lobb are similar.
I think to comment as a person you have to have a Google account and log in that way. This should change on my new site, launching later this year.
Simon
Hi Simon
What’s the name & make of the deglazer you use? Will see if I can find it online.
Thanks,
Owen
P.S. How’s it going for Team B Spokes?
Fiebing’s.
B Spokes have not been that active, it’s fair to say. We’ve ridden in twos and threes, but not much as a team. There are still mooted trips to Northampton and Fox, however
Thanks Simon.
Just out of interest, what do you ride? I’m looking with interest at cyclocross bikes right now.
Keep up the great work!
Bianchi Sempre, and Condor Fratello for commuting
I’m no bike expert though… at least compared to suits
Simon,
I have a pair of Oak-colored Adelaides from Alfred Sargent, and I am looking for some advice about darkening them. By using black and dark brown cream-polish, I can darken them, but the creasing along the vamp comes out in the underlying, light color (similar, maybe, to your Foster and Son banana-shoes).
I am not looking for anything particularly artistic (Berluti, Corthay, etc), just uniformly darker. Would stripping back and then dyeing the shoes be feasible, and would you recommend it?
Many thanks for the blog, Simon. It is a wonderful resource.
-Hugh
Chicago
Hi. Dying them like that is possible, but I wouldn’t recommend it. It’s easy to get wrong and ruin the shoes. Look at places that do patinas where you can send them to, like dandy shoe care
Do you know of anyone in the US?
And I know Justin (the shoe snob) has dyed shoes darker himself. The only reason I push back is that I’m not particularly going for artistically subtle. I’m aiming for quite dark brown. Unless you mean the dyes themselves can physically ruin the leather
Not necessarily ruin the leather, but end up with an uneven or messy finish
Ok. İ was thinking I would darken with dye, and use polishing plus time to build depth and character.
Thank you for the back and forth. The interaction s between commenters and author are (nearly) as informative as the articles themselves