Concordia wrote:Is this the Cleverley reindeer? Amazing, stuff that is.
I'm getting them from G&G. Tony said he gets the reindeer from a tannery in Cornwall.
hectorm wrote:Kayak81 wrote: He also suggested a bellows tongue to help keep water out.
I think a "bellows tongue" -adequate for heavier boots or hiking shoes- is a bit of an overkill for a pair of street shoes. I would definitely recommend against them in a pair of oxfords. In an open laced derby, that kind of tongue could be more relevant if you’re thinking of doing some serious puddle wading

but be aware there will be an extra fold of material pressing your foot.
They'll be a pair of ankle-height derbies. I had been concerned about the material pressing against my foot with the bellows tongue, but Tony said he could use a lighter weight fabric for the bellows part. I'm not exactly planning on doing serious puddle wading in these boots, but I do plan to wear them with a suit in inclement weather and use them as go-anywhere boots when on vacation (e.g. walking through snow/slush on city sidewalks & streets, country walks & cobblestone streets in wet weather, shuttling between business meetings during a London downpour, etc.). I don't plan to deliberately seek out the puddles, but I don't want to be scared to walk through them either. Does this make sense?
uppercase wrote:
Btw, why does anyone wear $1,000 shoes in the slush mud and snow? Can't figure that one out. They're beautiful but not workable for those conditions. I even hate to wear leather shoes in the rain.
Me too. I'm hoping that the combination of the reindeer upper and still-to-be-determined rubber sole will make these boots workable in these conditions.