Having recently got a detached heel-lift on a pair of good shoes I enjoy (which were already recrafted already when I bought them), I thought I'd do my own repair. The new lifts were over-sized, so they had to be trimmed to size after gluing on. Shopsmith sanding accessories worked pretty good!
(Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
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Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Nice work!
Shoemakers are expensive like everything else these days so I guess you saved a bit(lot) of money. AND, gave us a good lesson in DIY.
John
Shoemakers are expensive like everything else these days so I guess you saved a bit(lot) of money. AND, gave us a good lesson in DIY.
John
Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Nice work on the DIY repair! I've done a few similar heel-lift fixes myself, and there’s something satisfying about making it work with the right tools. I usually use a Dremel for shaping, but Shopsmith sanding accessories sound perfect for getting that even coverage. Plus, it saves a trip to the cobbler and a few bucks!
Last edited by HopefulSSer on Wed Nov 06, 2024 5:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Thanks!
As it happens, I went "shoe thrifting" again just lately.
Here is the pair of USA-made shoes I bought very cheap:
Here are my snips of replacing the worn-corner heels. We "Won't" show the extensive rubber heal removal process at the beginning. The bandsaw didn't like that job, so I hogged off a ton of material on the disk-sander instead. That disc sure stayed clean when working the rubber heels!
After contact-cement, I slathered on a bit of shop-dyed epoxy in any edge gaps:
The disc-sander, along with a slight table tilt, allowed making things flush between old and new parts:
Then, some dying, cleaning, and waxing!
As it happens, I went "shoe thrifting" again just lately.
Here is the pair of USA-made shoes I bought very cheap:
Here are my snips of replacing the worn-corner heels. We "Won't" show the extensive rubber heal removal process at the beginning. The bandsaw didn't like that job, so I hogged off a ton of material on the disk-sander instead. That disc sure stayed clean when working the rubber heels!
After contact-cement, I slathered on a bit of shop-dyed epoxy in any edge gaps:
The disc-sander, along with a slight table tilt, allowed making things flush between old and new parts:
Then, some dying, cleaning, and waxing!
Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Now.... looking forward to "Spring verdigris"....
Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Nice!
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
- chapmanruss
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Re: (Apologies to Farmer) Cobbling together my shoe(s)
Nice work on those shoe repairs.
Shopsmith tools, not just for woodworking.
Shopsmith tools, not just for woodworking.

Russ
Mark V completely upgraded to Mark 7
Mark V 520
All SPT's & 2 Power Stations
Model 10ER S/N R64000 first one I restored on bench w/ metal ends & retractable casters.
Has Speed Changer, 4E Jointer, Jig Saw with lamp, a complete set of original accessories & much more.
Model 10E's S/N's 1076 & 1077 oldest ones I have restored. Mark 2 S/N 85959 restored. Others to be restored.
Mark V completely upgraded to Mark 7
Mark V 520
All SPT's & 2 Power Stations
Model 10ER S/N R64000 first one I restored on bench w/ metal ends & retractable casters.
Has Speed Changer, 4E Jointer, Jig Saw with lamp, a complete set of original accessories & much more.
Model 10E's S/N's 1076 & 1077 oldest ones I have restored. Mark 2 S/N 85959 restored. Others to be restored.