oscarthewild
Distinguished Member
- Joined
- May 6, 2004
- Messages
- 2,396
- Reaction score
- 58
Any ideas how much these went for? I have heard $1395 but that seems awfully steep.
STYLE. COMMUNITY. GREAT CLOTHING.
Bored of counting likes on social networks? At Styleforum, you’ll find rousing discussions that go beyond strings of emojis.
Click Here to join Styleforum's thousands of style enthusiasts today!
Styleforum is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.
I wonder how it differs from the 404, which EG bills as the "Transatlantic Peal shape" or something like that. From your description, it sounds similar.Flusser has commissioned a special last (I believe it is the 707) which he says replicates the famous Peal shape that Brooks Brothers sold in the 1950s and 60s (also made by Edward Green). It is a "banana" shape: very straight on the inner edge, quite curved on the outer edge. The toe box is high, but not quite so high as a Budapest, and the toe is rounded yet asymetrical. There is really nothing else like them ready-made, at least not that I have seen.
The shoe on p. 196 looks like EG's Buckingham model, and the one on p. 197 looks like EG's Atlee model:Some of the designs are pretty standard (plain monks, half brogues, etc.). Others are unique to the Flusser store, so far as I know. For instance, there is a dress slip-on that looks just like the shoe on p. 197 of Dressing the Man; I haven't seen that anywhere else. There is a loafer that looks just like the shoe on p. 196 (essentially a penny loafer with no slot in the vamp decoration). There is also another brogue slip-on with a very short vamp that I think is unique to the shop.
That actually sounds a lot like one of Cleverley's signature shoes. I've never seen that EG model in person, either, but that's the beauty of the Japanese shoe Appreciation sites.It's not quite the same, though. On Flusser's version, the broguing is a little more pronounced; the toe medallion is different (more unusual, and nicer, in my opinion); there is no heel counter; and the coup-de-grace: there are little strips of leather coverning the elastic on the gussets. But I agree that it is quite similar. I had never seen that EG model.
Jun Kuwana's do:All the Cleverley side gusset shoes I've seen don't have the strips of leather on the gusset, and don't have that "point" on the apron.
Well, Jun apparently has two or three of everything, so he has to have at least some burgundy shoes. I'd prefer something a bit darker, but I don't mind burgundy. I usually would opt for a species of brown, but variety is the spice of life.Nice shoes. Though why did he get burgundy?
This elasticated slip-on was old Mr Cleverley's favourite style. If he didn't invent it, at least he refined it and created numerous variations (one even with faux-laces). He believed it to be the shoe style to give the perfect fit.That actually sounds a lot like one of Cleverley's signature shoes.