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My May interview is now up on the blog and as always, I thought that I would share it with all of you. Enjoy! -Justin http://the-shoe-snob.blogspot.com/2011/05/carreducker-interview.html Questions: 1. How long have you been involved in shoemaking/shoe design? 2. What was it that made you decide that you wanted to get into shoemaking/shoe design? 3. Most English shoemakers are very conservative in their look (shoe design) yet you tend to be a bit more creative and unique in your styling. Why break the traditional English mold? 4. What is your favorite color? Favorite color on a shoe? 5. What is your favorite model out of Carreducker's collection? 6. You recently moved into Gieves & Hawkes, how has the transition help/affected Carreducker's business? 7. What is the hardest thing about being a bespoke shoemaker? Subsequently, what is the most rewarding? 8.You offer a course where you teach people how to make a pair of shoes, how many people (that you know of) have gone on the continue the trade? 9. What do you hope to see unfold in the shoe industry within the next 10 years? 10. And advice for aspiring shoemakers/shoe designers? Snippet: 3. Most English shoemakers are very conservative in their look (shoe design) yet you tend to be a bit more creative and unique in your styling. Why break the traditional English mold? DC: I can't help it - I have Sark and American blood in me! No seriously that is why James and I are such a good design team, he tempers my extravagances and I push him outside his comfort zone. English people are renown for their eccentricity - and James and I don't go crazy, we just like good style and design. JD: A NUMBER OF REASONS REALLY. IT IS OUR NATURAL AESTHETIC TO DESIGN THE WAY WE DO. YOU HAVE TO BE TRUE TO YOUR SELF AS A DESIGNER AND THEN HOPE THAT CUSTOMERS LIKE YOUR STYLE AND BUY INTO IT. IT SETS US APART FROM OUR COMPETITORS. BEING JUST LIKE THEM WOULD NOT HELP US. IT BRINGS THE CRAFT INTO THE 21ST CENTURY BY MARRYING ANCIENT CRAFT SKILLS WITH A MODERN DESIGN ETHOS