Submitted by frustrated-rocka t3_z1zvr7 in BuyItForLife
I'm broke, and I'm trying to save money over the long term by saving up to try and reduce or eliminate one of my larger annual expenses - and where better to start getting out from under the boots theory of socioeconomic unfairness than with my actual boots?
I don't like to think about my wardrobe. I am perfectly happy owning exactly 3 pairs of shoes: one running / gym pair, one dress pair, and one pair for everything else. I'm looking for one pair of daily driver shoes that I can wear :
- To the office
- On a date
- On errands
- Doing home / car maintenance
- On a light hike
- In all kinds of terrible weather
- For the rest of my life
There appears to be some debate about what price point that could be achievable at. Two years ago, poor, uneducated, naive little me thought that could be done with a $120 pair of Doc Martens 1460s, which are still the most expensive footwear I have ever owned. I probably have a year or two left on them at this rate, but at this point, the next thing that goes wrong is not going to get repaired.
Some considerations:
- My toes rise when I walk. Every sneaker and cheap hiking boot I've ever had has either blown out at the toe cap or had the sole separate at the ball of the foot. If the toe box on a boot is low, it needs to be flexible. Otherwise, something's going to give, and that something will probably be my foot rather than a tough leather boot.
- The docs are currently at the cobbler for worn through lining at the heels and cracked heel counters. It's a $50 repair that should hopefully help with the heel slip I've been getting in them. I've also gotten orthotics for them that have helped, and which I could potentially reuse in whatever the next boot I get is. They've been my go-to for leaving the house for the last 2 years; given the pandemic, that's not saying a massive amount.
- Grip: I live in a city. It rains. In my experience, smooth soles do not like concrete, brick, and asphalt when wet, and are a deathtrap when ice or slush are present.
- Size: the current Doc Martens 1460 is a US 9. I know they run small, but I honestly don't know if my proper shoe size is 9.5, 10 or 10.5 US.
- Style: Has to be plain toe, and would have to be very attractive to convince me to not have the sole be all black. Color: black or dark, warm brown only, absolutely no suede. Yes, I am boring.
- Everything I've read says that bad things happen if you don't rotate your shoes. If the one shoe for everything forever policy is that far out of the question, then the budget drops to 200, since whatever I buy, I'd need to get two of.
Based on what I've seen recommended here, the options I know about are:
- $199: Thursday President. Pros: Very good looking, appear to be a decent number of people reporting it still going strong after 4+ years, seems like the only option even worth considering at $200. Cons: Quality control, durability questions, toe cap is concerningly low
- $210: Solovair 8-Eye Derby boot. Pros: Kind of a known quantity, the proper version of what I have now. Great reviews. Sell replacement default & commando soles to maintain the feel I've gotten used to after resoling. Cons: Possible heel slip also carries over from Doc Martens, copy-paste customer service response to sole separation defects has shown up in multiple searches from posts spanning years.
- $350: Red Wing Iron Ranger. Pros: Cheapest I've found that people agree should actually last a lifetime, can be tried on at a store very close to me, lots of vertical room in toe area. Cons: Not as dressy as I'd like, I hate cap toes, EXPENSIVE, would not allow for backup pair, there is exactly 1 used / factory pair in my size available anywhere online that I've looked, and I can't afford to pull the trigger on that pair at this time.
- $380: Grant Stone Diesel. Pros: leather heel counter, have seen nothing but praise for craftsmanship, plain toe. Cons: EXPENSIVE, factory seconds not available, online only, unlikely to find used pair in size and color I like, would not allow for anything as backup pair, possible that leather heel counter could lose stability over time and introduce slip?
- $???: These, which would possibly involve straining my relationship with parts of my family were I to ask about them. Pros: Handmade by a relative; everything else I've gotten from him has been completely indestructible with minimal maintenance required - the belt I got from him has been worn every day for the last 8 years, used as a strop, used as impromptu handcuffs, used as an improvised weapon (a larp got way out of hand), occasionally been slept in, and shows barely any signs of wear except for some wrinkling at the holes I use and overall darkening of the brown leather. Cons: Said family member lives on the other side of the planet from me so shipping would be a nightmare on top of the cost of the boot, it absolutely has to fit in whatever size I get the first time, returns are not feasible, and I'm not comfortable asking for a discount since I've actually been in his workshop and seen how much work goes into these.
I'm sure there are other brands that people swear by that haven't jumped out in my research, and I would love to hear about them, especially if there are any others worth looking at closer to the $200 range.
I'm sure this all reads like someone coming into a Ferrari subreddit and asking about reliable vehicles they can use to get from point A to point B, but I am new to all of this and even the cheapest of these options will require at least a few months to save up for. Thanks for your input!
GexGecko t1_ixdtuf4 wrote
Didn't Vimes prefer his cardboard soles? How else would he know what street he was on?
My 'Bogs' are comfortable, but are starting to rip after only a year.